|
|
M S Brown, J R Faust, J L Goldstein
J Clin Invest. 1975;
55(4):783
doi:10.1172/JCI107989
Abstract |
Full text
| PDF

T
he transfer of normal human fibroblasts from medium containing whole serum to medium devoid of lipoproteins produced a 90 percent decrease in the cellular content of cholesteryl esters and a 30 percent decrease in the free cholesterol content. When these lipoprotein-deprived cells were subsequently incubated with human low density lipoprotein (LDL), there was a 7-fold increase in the cellular content of esterified cholesterol and a 1.6-fold increase in the cellular content of free cholesterol. The concentration at which LDL produced its half-maximal effect in elevating cellular sterol content (30 mug/ml of LDL-cholesterol) was similar to the half-maximal concentration previously reported for high affinity binding of LDL to its cell surface receptor. High density lipoprotein (HDL) and whole serum from a patient with abetalipoproteinemia (neither of which contains a component that binds to the LDL receptor) did not produce a significant increase in the content of either cholesterol or cholesteryl esters in normal cells. Furthermore, in fibroblasts from patients with the homozygous form of familial hypercholesterolemia, which lack functional LDL receptors, LDL had no effect in raising the cellular content of either free or esterified cholesterol even when present in the medium at concentrations as high as 450 mug sterol/ml. It is concluded that LDL-receptor interactions constitute an important biochemical mechanism for the regulation of the cholesterol content of normal human fibroblasts. Moreover, when considered in light of current concepts of LDL metabolism in intact mammals, the present data suggest that a major function of plasma LDL may be to transport cholesterol from its site of synthesis in liver and intestine to its site of uptake in peripheral tissues.
Citation information
This citation data is accumulated from CrossRef, which receives citation information from participating publishers, including this journal.
Not all publishers participate in CrossRef, so this information is not comprehensive.
Additionally, data may not reflect the most current citations to this article,
and the data may differ from citation information available from other sources
(for example, Google Scholar, Web of Science, and Scopus).
Total citations by year
in CrossRef
Citations to this article
in CrossRef
(68)
| Title and authors |
Publication |
Year |
Fructose containing sugars modulate mRNA of lipogenic genes ACC and FAS and protein levels of transcription factors ChREBP and SREBP1c with no effect on body weight or liver fat
Mile Janevski, Sunil Ratnayake, Svetlana Siljanovski, Maree A. McGlynn, David Cameron-Smith, Paul Lewandowski
|
Food Funct.
|
2012 |
Comprehensive Physiology
Margit Hamosh, Paul Hamosh
|
Comprehensive Physiology
|
2011 |
Liquid Crystal in Lung Development and Chicken Embryogenesis
Xuehong Xu, MengMeng Xu, Odell D. Jones, Xunzhang Chen, Li Yanfei, Guifang Yan, Yuexing Pan, Harry G. Davis, Yi Xu, Joseph L. Bryant, Shangen Zheng, Donald D. Anthony
|
Molecular Crystals and Liquid Crystals
|
2011 |
Cytoplasmic Accumulation of Liquid-Crystal Like Droplets in Post-Infection Sputum Generated by Gram-Positive Bacteria
MengMeng Xu, Odell D. Jones, Shangen Zheng, Li Yanfei, Guifang Yan, Yuexing Pan, Harry G. Davis, Donald D. Anthony, Yi Xu, Joseph L. Bryant, Xuehong Xu
|
Molecular Crystals and Liquid Crystals
|
2011 |
Comprehensive Physiology
Russell Ross, Beverly Kariya
|
Comprehensive Physiology
|
2011 |
The Tromsø Heart Study
O. H. Førde, D. S. Thelle, N. E. Miller, O. D. Mjøs
|
Acta Medica Scandinavica
|
2009 |
From fatty streak to fatty liver: 33 years of joint publications in the JCI
Joseph L. Goldstein, Michael S. Brown
|
J. Clin. Invest.
|
2008 |
Synthesis and turnover of non-polar lipids in yeast
Sona Rajakumari, Karlheinz Grillitsch, Günther Daum
|
Progress in Lipid Research
|
2008 |
Low density lipoprotein receptor activity in cultured fibroblasts from subjects with or without ischemic heart disease (in the absence of familial hypercholesterolemia)*
Kjell Maartmann-Moe, Per Magnus, Anne-Lise Børresen, Kare Berg
|
Clinical Genetics
|
2008 |
Prenatal diagnosis of homozygous familial hypercholesterolemia: Investigation of a case at risk
Thomas F. Wienker, Gerd Utermann, Hans-Hilger Ropers
|
Clinical Genetics
|
2008 |
|