Abstract

Low density lipoprotein (LDL) and very low density lipoprotein (VLDL) bind specifically to a receptor on fibroblasts, and it has been postulated that the apoprotein of LDL (apo B) confers the specificity of cellular binding. This hypothesis has been tested in the present study with a watersoluble apo B-bovine serum albumin complex. The binding of (125)I-labeled apo B to cultured fibroblasts was temperature-dependent. Specific binding ranged between 183 and 859 ng/mg of cell protein at a concentration of 5 mug/ml; at 37 degrees , 750-2199 ng/mg was bound and internalized. The binding of apo B greatly exceeded the amount of (125)I-labeled LDL bound at 4 degrees and 37 degrees in the same experiment. Fibroblasts from a subject homozygous for hyper-beta-lipoproteinemia showed minimal binding of (125)I-labeled LDL, consistent with the absence of the cellular LDL receptor. Such cells also had depressed binding of (125)I-labeled apo B. Lymphocytes grown in lipoprotein-deficient medium demonstrated specific binding of LDL; however, freshly isolated lymphocytes did not show such binding. The binding of (125)I-labeled apo B to lymphocytes paralleled the binding of (125)I-labeled LDL. Unlabeled LDL and apo B-albumin complex both competitively inhibited the binding of (125)I-labeled apo B and (125)I-labeled LDL to fibroblasts. When labeled LDL was incubated with fibroblasts for 6 hr at 37 degrees , it underwent cellular internalization and degradation, as measured by the release of (125)I-labeled fragments into the medium. This degradation was inhibited by unlabeled apo B. Conversely, (125)I-labeled apo B also was internalized and degraded by fibroblasts, and this process was inhibited by LDL. These findings demonstrate that apo B binds specifically to the LDL receptor and that the cellular binding of LDL is determined by this apoprotein.

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