Abstract

Products resulting from the sonification of mixtures of plasma high density lipoprotein apoprotein and specific lipids were studied by electron microscopy using negative staining. Sonicates of apoprotein plus lecithin produced disc-shaped structures which stacked in aggregates with a 50–55-Å repeat; the discs were 100–200 Å in diameter. Incorporation of unesterified cholesterol into the mixture produced structures morphologically similar to those observed in sonicates of apoprotein plus lecithin. Disc-shaped particles from sonified mixtures of apoprotein, lecithin and unesterified cholesterol were ultracentrifugally isolated in the d 1.063–1.21 g/ ml fraction and were incubated with a plasma d > 1.21 g/ ml fraction containing lecithin: cholesterol acyltransferase activity. Electron microscopy following the incubation procedure showed a transformation of the disc-like structures into approximately spherical particles (50–100 Å diameter). Similar spherical particles were also obtained after sonification of apoprotein-lecithin-unesterified cholesterol-cholesteryl ester mixtures. Results indicate a requirement for the presence of cholesteryl esters to maintain normal morphology of plasma high density lipoproteins.

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