Abstract

The association of the low-density lipoprotein (LDL) receptor with detergent resistant hepatic membranes was investigated using discontinuous sucrose gradients. In liver homogenates from both hamsters and rats, the fractions with the highest concentrations of LDL receptor coincided with the location of caveolin-1, a marker of the cholesterol-rich caveolae. Feeding the animals diets enriched in cholesterol slightly shifted both LDL receptor and caveolin-1 to positions of lower density. The cholesterol content of the caveolae fractions was increased 2-fold in animals fed cholesterol-supplemented diets. In homogenates of CHO cells, fractionated in the same manner, the LDL receptor was absent from the caveolae fractions but was present in denser fractions near the bottom of the gradient. Addition of caveolin-1 antibody to solubilized caveolae from liver coimmunoprecipitated the LDL receptor. These observations suggest that in liver, the LDL receptor is mainly located in caveolae. This location contrasts with the clathrin-coated pit location observed in fibroblasts and CHO cells.

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