Journal of Lipid Research (Mar 1972)
Very low density lipoproteins and lipoprotein lipase in serum of rats deficient in essential fatty acids
Abstract
Rats fed a diet deficient in essential fatty acids have a low level of serum very low density lipoproteins (VLDL). It was found that after intraperitoneal injection of heparin, deficient rats had a higher level of lipoprotein lipase activity in their plasma than did normal rats. VLDL isolated from serum of normal and deficient rats were compared as substrates for postheparin lipase of rat plasma. There was no significant difference in Vmax between the two preparations of lipoproteins, but the apparent Km for lipoproteins from deficient animals was significantly less than that for normal animals. These observations suggest that the low concentration of VLDL in deficient rats may be explained (a) by an increased activity of lipoprotein lipase in the tissues of these animals and (b) by the VLDL of deficient rats being more rapidly hydrolyzed at low concentrations by lipoprotein lipase than VLDL from normal rats.