STUDIES ON THE IMMUNOCHEMISTRY OF HUMAN LOW DENSITY LIPOPROTEINS UTILIZING AN HEMAGGLUTINATION TECHNIQUE

Hemagglutination is a specific and sensitive technique for investigating the purity of lipoproteins and the immunologic relationships between low density lipoprotein fractions. The Sf 10–400 and Sf 3–9 lipoprotein fractions, isolated from human serum by dextran sulfate-density gradient centrifugation procedure and repurified by centrifugation appeared to contain only lipoprotein antigens since these fractions did not stimulate the production of antibodies against other serum proteins. Cross-absorption experiments with lipoproteins carried on "tanned" cells demonstrated that the Sf 3–9 lipoprotein fraction contains all the antigenic components of the Sf 10–400 lipoprotein fraction together with additional antigenic components not found in the Sf 10–400 lipoprotein fraction. Thus Sf 3–9 and Sf 10–400 lipoprotein fractions are immunologically similar but not identical. Low density lipoproteins contain no antigens in common with the high density lipoproteins. An Sf 3–9 antiserum can be used to detect both Sf 3–9 and Sf 10–400 antigens. The Sf 3–9 lipoprotein fraction used as an antigen will detect antibodies against both Sf 3–9 and Sf 10–400 lipoprotein fractions. The Sf 3–9 and Sf 10–400 antisera did not contain immune antibodies against erythrocytes of the different blood groups or against sheep, guinea pig, dog, calf, pig, horse, and chicken erythrocytes. Normal subjects and subjects with recent myocardial infarctions had no circulating autoantibodies against the Sf 3–9 and Sf 10–400 lipoprotein fractions.

[1]  I. Page,et al.  STUDIES ON THE ANTIGENICITY OF β- AND α1-LIPOPROTEINS OF HUMAN SERUM , 1958, The Journal of experimental medicine.

[2]  M. Rodbell N-terminal amino acid and lipid composition of lipoproteins from chyle and plasma. , 1958, Science.

[3]  C. Janeway,et al.  Studies on the metabolism of plasma proteins in the nephrotic syndrome. II. The lipoproteins. , 1958, The Journal of clinical investigation.

[4]  D. Cornwell,et al.  A Rapid Method for the Bulk Isolation of β-Lipoproteins from Human Plasma1 , 1957 .

[5]  L. Levine,et al.  IMMUNOLOGIC STUDIES OF HUMAN HIGH DENSITY LIPOPROTEINS , 1957, The Journal of experimental medicine.

[6]  J. Gofman,et al.  IMMUNOCHEMICAL STUDIES ON HUMAN PLASMA LIPOPROTEINS , 1957, The Journal of experimental medicine.

[7]  R. Burrell,et al.  Tuberculous antibodies demonstrated by agar diffusion. I. Specificity and incidence of agar-diffusion antibodies in rabbit sera. , 1956, American review of tuberculosis.

[8]  C. Janeway,et al.  Studies on the metabolism of plasma proteins in the nephrotic syndrome. II. The lipoproteins. , 1958, The Journal of clinical investigation.

[9]  R. Havel,et al.  The distribution and chemical composition of ultracentrifugally separated lipoproteins in human serum. , 1955, The Journal of clinical investigation.

[10]  L. Levine,et al.  THE ANTIGENIC SIMILARITY OF HUMAN LOW DENSITY LIPOPROTEINS , 1955, The Journal of experimental medicine.

[11]  L. Korngold,et al.  Immunochemical studies of human plasma beta lipoprotein. , 1955, Science.

[12]  W. C. Grant,et al.  Production of Antisera Against Plasma Lipoprotein Fraction.∗ , 1954, Proceedings of the Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine. Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine.

[13]  M. Dodd,et al.  Evaluation of drop techniques for the detection of hemagglutinins and hemolysins in tuberculous sera. , 1954, The American journal of medical technology.

[14]  O. H. Lowry,et al.  The quantitative histochemistry of brain. I. Chemical methods. , 1954, The Journal of biological chemistry.

[15]  O. H. Lowry,et al.  The quantitative histochemistry of brain. II. Enzyme measurements. , 1954, The Journal of biological chemistry.

[16]  O. H. Lowry,et al.  THE QUANTITATIVE HISTOCHEMISTRY OF THE BRAIN , 1953, The journal of histochemistry and cytochemistry : official journal of the Histochemistry Society.

[17]  B. Brodie,et al.  A simplified method for the estimation of total cholesterol in serum and demonstration of its specificity. , 1952, The Journal of biological chemistry.

[18]  S. Boyden THE ADSORPTION OF PROTEINS ON ERYTHROCYTES TREATED WITH TANNIC ACID AND SUBSEQUENT HEMAGGLUTINATION BY ANTIPROTEIN SERA , 1951, The Journal of experimental medicine.

[19]  T. Mcmeekin,et al.  A NEW DIRECT NESSLERIZATION MICRO-KJELDAHL METHOD AND A MODIFICATION OF THE NESSLER-FOLIN REAGENT FOR AMMONIA , 1924 .

[20]  J. Gofman The Clinical Significance of Serum Lipoproteins , 1958 .