Using glycolaldehyde (two carbons, C2) and monosaccharides of the aldose D series, i. e., glyceraldehyde (C3), erythrose (C4), arabinose (C5), and glucose (C6), new modified low density lipoproteins (LDLs) were produced to determine if degradation of modified LDLs by the human monocyte-derived macrophage (Mφ) scavenger receptors is based on the molecular weight of the substance used to modify the LDL free lysine.By using a trinitrobenzensulfonic acid (TNBS) assay, it was found that the smaller the molecular weight of the substances used for LDL modification, the more rapid and extensive is the decrease of free lysine, which plateaued after 24h. Based on findings of glycolaldehyde-LDL, glyceraldehyde-LDL and erythrose-LDL, double reciprocal plots were made. Results revealed that all three reactions occured through the same mechanism, although the Km values in the three modified LDLs differed. Further, the electrophoretic mobility of these modified LDLs correlated with a decrease in the percentage of TNBS reactivity.Using Mφ, degradation studies of mildly modified LDLs revealed that, in contrast to native LDL, little degradation occured. However, after extensive modifications, less degradation was seen in glycolaldehyde-LDL, glyceraldehyde-LDL and erythrose-LDL than in the acetyl-LDL, but more degradation occured in these new modified LDLs than in native LDL. Further, degradation of 125-I-glyceraldehyde-LDL was remarkedly inhibited in unlabeled acetyl-LDL, 125-Iglycolaldehyde-LDL and fucoidin, whereas in unlabeled oxidized LDL and advanced glycoslation end products(AGE)-modified bovine serum albumin, degradation of 125-I-glyceraldehyde-LDL was extremely slight. In contrast, unlabeled native LDL produced no inhibitory effect on the degradation of 125-I-glyceraldehyde-LDL. These findings would seem to suggest that after extensive modification, receptor recognition of glyceraldehyde-LDL changes from the LDL receptor to the scavenger one.Degradation of new modified LDLs appeared to depend on a decrease in the percentage of TNBS reactivity. Further, even though these modified LDLs showed the same ΔTNBS decrease, these degradation progressively increased in the following order: erythrose-LDL. glyceraldehyde-LDL, and glycolaldehyde-LDL, These findings suggest that the degree of LDL degradation is not only associated with an increase in the negative charge and decrease in the percentage of TNBS reactivity, but also with the molecular weight of the substance used to modify the LDLs.Arabinose-LDL and glycosylated LDL showed less degradation than native LDL, although LDLs were incubated for 5 days with a high concentration of their respective modifying substance. Degradation decreased even further when NaBH3CN was used for extensive LDL modification. These findings suggest that the particle size and/or the stereoscopic strucure of modified LDLs may play an important role in becoming the ligand of the scavenger receptor.Glucose promotes oxidative LDL modification. Further, glycosylated LDL are easily oxidized by metalic ions, and oxidized LDL are extensively degraded by the scavenger receptors. However, our results have demonstrated that glycosylated LDL is not recognized by the scavenger receptors even after extensive modification. We thus have speculated that under hyperglycemic conditions, LDLs may promote the formation of foam cells as not only AGE but also oxidized and/or glycoxidized LDLs.
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