Journal of Lipid Research (Mar 2002)

LDL particle subclasses in hypercholesterolemia: molecular determinants of reduced lipid hydroperoxide stability

  • Laurent Chancharme,
  • Patrice Thérond,
  • Fabienne Nigon,
  • Stéphanie Zarev,
  • Alain Mallet,
  • Eric Bruckert,
  • M. John Chapman

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 43, no. 3
pp. 453 – 462

Abstract

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Hypercholesterolemia is characterized by elevated plasma levels of LDL in which the cholesteryl ester (CE)-rich LDL subclasses of light and intermediate density (LDL1+2 and LDL3, respectively) typically predominate. The molecular mechanisms implicated in oxidation of LDL particle subclasses in hypercholesterolemia are indeterminate. Lipid hydroperoxides (LOOH), primary oxidation products in LDL, are implicated in atherogenesis. LOOH formation was evaluated in light (LDL1+2), intermediate (LDL3), and dense (LDL4+5) LDL subclasses from hypercholesterolemic (HC) subjects (n = 7) during copper-mediated oxidative stress, and compared with that in corresponding subclasses from normolipidemic subjects (n = 7). HC LDL subclasses were distinguished by lower polyunsaturated phospholipid-α-tocopherol ratios (P < 0.02), lower contents of phosphatidyl choline (PC)16:0-18:0/18:2 and PC16:0-18:0/20:4+22:6 (P < 0.002), and higher surface phospholipid-free cholesterol ratios (P < 0.04). The LDL3, LDL4, and LDL5 subclasses in HC subjects displayed low-core polyunsaturated CE-α-tocopherol ratios (P < 0.05), despite similar PUFA CE content. These physicochemical differences did not modify the oxidative susceptibility of HC LDL but underlie the marked instability of cholesterol linoleate hydroperoxides in HC LDL1+2, LDL3, and LDL4 subclasses. Elevated concentrations of large, CE-rich, light, and intermediate LDL subclasses (LDL1+2, LDL3) in hypercholesterolemia may therefore act as an abundant proatherogenic source of highly unstable LOOH in the arterial wall.—Chancharme, L., P. Thérond, F. Nigon, S. Zarev, A. Mallet, E. Bruckert, and M. J. Chapman. LDL particle subclasses in hypercholesterolemia: molecular determinants of reduced lipid hydroperoxide stability. J. Lipid Res. 2002. 43: 453–462.

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