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  • Title: Secretion of lipoproteins, apolipoprotein A-I and apolipoprotein E by isolated and perfused liver of rat with experimental nephrotic syndrome.
    Author: Calandra S, Gherardi E, Fainaru M, Guaitani A, Bartosek I.
    Journal: Biochim Biophys Acta; 1981 Aug 24; 665(2):331-8. PubMed ID: 6793079.
    Abstract:
    Nephrotic syndrome induced in the rat by the administration of puromycin aminonucleoside is accompanied by a hyperlipoproteinemia characterized by an elevation of all plasma lipoproteins, particularly of VLDL (1.006 g/ml) and HDL1 (1.050-1.090 g/ml). The increase of HDL1 is due to the accumulation of a lipoprotein species floating mainly in the density interval 1.050-1.090 g/ml, in which apolipoprotein A-I replaces apolipoprotein E as the major constituent peptide. This lipoprotein has been designated nephrotic HDL. The present study was conducted to establish whether nephrotic liver secreted more lipoproteins than the control liver and, in addition, produced a lipoprotein similar to nephrotic HDL found in plasma. Isolated livers from control and nephrotic rats were perfused with a lipoprotein-free medium for 3 h in a recirculating system. Lipoproteins were isolated by ultracentrifugation; apolipoprotein A-I and apolipoprotein E were measured in the whole perfusate at various time intervals. Nephrotic liver secreted twice as much VLDL and HDL2 and 30% more LDL and HDL1 than the control liver. This was accompanied by an increased secretion of both apolipoprotein A-I and apolipoprotein E, the levels of which were 6.5- and 2-fold, respectively, of those found in the control perfusates at the end of the perfusion. In view of the increased secretion of apolipoprotein A-I, the apolipoprotein A-I to apolipoprotein E ratio was much higher in the perfusates of nephrotic livers than in those of the controls. The concentration of apolipoproteins A-I and E in plasma of nephrotic rats was 7- and 2-fold, respectively, of that found in the plasma of the controls. In the perfusates of the nephrotic livers, we could not find a HDL1 (1.050-1.090 g/ml) rich in apolipoprotein A-I similar to that isolated from plasma (nephrotic HDL). We suggest that the latter is formed in the circulation from the intravascular modification of HDL2 secreted in excess by the liver.
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