Journal of Lipid Research (May 1989)

Detection of vesicular lipoproteins in lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase-deficient plasma by 1H-NMR spectroscopy.

  • Y I Parmar,
  • D L Sparks,
  • J Frohlich,
  • P R Cullis,
  • P H Pritchard

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 30, no. 5
pp. 765 – 771

Abstract

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The proton NMR spectra of the N-methyl choline region of normal and lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase (LCAT)-deficient lipoproteins and of egg yolk phosphatidylcholine-cholesterol 55:45 (mol %) vesicle mixtures have been examined in the presence and absence of manganous sulfate as a line-broadening reagent. Manganous ions quenched all of the signal arising from normal lipoproteins and only part of the vesicle signal corresponding to the outer monolayer. There was no net loss of vesicular phospholipid when vesicles were added to normal lipoproteins and as little as 5% (or 100 micrograms) of the vesicular phospholipid could be detected and quantitated in the mixture of lipoproteins. Similar experiments performed on plasma lipoproteins from an LCAT-deficient patient indicated that 42% of the phospholipid was associated with vesicular lipoproteins. These experiments demonstrate that this technique can be used to detect and quantify small amounts of vesicular structures directly in a mixture of micellar lipoproteins.