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Lipoprotein lipase reaches the capillary lumen in chickens despite an apparent absence of GPIHBP1
Cuiwen He, … , Loren G. Fong, Stephen G. Young
Cuiwen He, … , Loren G. Fong, Stephen G. Young
Published October 19, 2017
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2017;2(20):e96783. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.96783.
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Research Article Metabolism

Lipoprotein lipase reaches the capillary lumen in chickens despite an apparent absence of GPIHBP1

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Abstract

In mammals, GPIHBP1 is absolutely essential for transporting lipoprotein lipase (LPL) to the lumen of capillaries, where it hydrolyzes the triglycerides in triglyceride-rich lipoproteins. In all lower vertebrate species (e.g., birds, amphibians, reptiles, fish), a gene for LPL can be found easily, but a gene for GPIHBP1 has never been found. The obvious question is whether the LPL in lower vertebrates is able to reach the capillary lumen. Using purified antibodies against chicken LPL, we showed that LPL is present on capillary endothelial cells of chicken heart and adipose tissue, colocalizing with von Willebrand factor. When the antibodies against chicken LPL were injected intravenously into chickens, they bound to LPL on the luminal surface of capillaries in heart and adipose tissue. LPL was released rapidly from chicken hearts with an infusion of heparin, consistent with LPL being located inside blood vessels. Remarkably, chicken LPL bound in a specific fashion to mammalian GPIHBP1. However, we could not identify a gene for GPIHBP1 in the chicken genome, nor could we identify a transcript for GPIHBP1 in a large chicken RNA-seq data set. We conclude that LPL reaches the capillary lumen in chickens — as it does in mammals — despite an apparent absence of GPIHBP1.

Authors

Cuiwen He, Xuchen Hu, Rachel S. Jung, Mikael Larsson, Yiping Tu, Sandra Duarte-Vogel, Paul Kim, Norma P. Sandoval, Tara R. Price, Christopher M. Allan, Brian Raney, Haibo Jiang, André Bensadoun, Rosemary L. Walzem, Richard I. Kuo, Anne P. Beigneux, Loren G. Fong, Stephen G. Young

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Figure 5

Chicken lipoprotein lipase (cLPL) can be released from tissues with heparin.

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Chicken lipoprotein lipase (cLPL) can be released from tissues with hepa...
(A) Isolated chicken hearts were perfused with 20 U/ml heparin, and cLPL protein was detected in individual fractions (0.2 ml/fraction) by Western blotting with a goat antibody against cLPL. (B) cLPL activity in the fractions from 3 different chickens (Heparin-1, Heparin-2, Heparin-3) was measured with a [3H]triolein substrate. As a control, a chicken heart was perfused with saline only (Saline). (C) Inhibition of the LPL activity with a goat antiserum against cLPL. For these studies, we pooled fractions 3–5 from 2 of the chickens (Heparin-1 and Heparin-2). We aliquoted 25 μl of the pooled fractions and then added either 50 μl of the goat antiserum against cLPL or normal goat serum. We then performed LPL activity assays. The 4 data points represent duplicate lipase assays on the fractions from 2 chickens. (D) Bar graph showing rapid heparin-mediated release of mouse LPL (mLPL) from an isolated heart of a wild-type mouse (black bars). Heparin-mediated release of mLPL from the heart of a Gpihbp1-deficient mouse was delayed (white bars). Similar results were observed in 2 other pairs of wild-type and Gpihbp1-deficient mice. (E) Rapid release of cLPL (as measured by ELISA) into the plasma of a cockerel after an intravenous injection of heparin (2 U/g body weight). (F) Rapid release of cLPL into the plasma of 4 hens after an intravenous injection of heparin (2 U/g body weight).

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