Lipoprotein(a) and total plasma homocysteine levels are now established as independent atherothrombogenic risk factors.A distinctive pathophysiological feature of lipoprotein(a) is its antifibrinolytic activity, an effect dependent on plasma concentration and high affinity for fibrin of its small size apo(a) component. A stimulating effect of homocysteine on purified lipoprotein( a) has been proposed. However, little is known about their specific interactions in human plasma. We demonstrate by immunochemical, ligand-binding and plasminogen activation studies, that homocysteine modifies the structure and function of lipoprotein(a) in human plasma; it reduces the apo(a)/apoB disulfide bond causing the appearance of free apo(a) with high affinity for fibrin that inhibits plasminogen binding and plasmin formation (r= –0.995, p =0.002).These effects were evident particularly in plasma samples containing lipoprotein(a) with low af finity for fibrin and more than 22 kringles apo(a) isoforms. In contrast, for plasmas containing high fibrin affinity lipoprotein(a) (less than 22 kringles apo[a] isoforms) no significant change neither in fibrin binding nor in plasmin formation was observed. Furthermore, isolated apo(a) recombinants (10 to 34 kringles) that have been shown to display size-independent high affinity for fibrin were not affected by homocysteine, thus confirming lipoprotein( a) as its main target. These results suggest that the pro-atherogenic role already conferred to lipoprotein(a) by small apo(a) isoforms may be extended to large apo(a) isoforms if released in plasma by homocysteine,as this mechanism reveals their high fibrin affinity. Lipoprotein(a) and homocysteine may therefore constitute, if acting in concert, a new risk factor for athero-thrombotic vascular disease.

Mechanism for the homocysteine-enhanced antifibrinolytic potential of lipoprotein(a) in human plasma.

2005

Abstract

Lipoprotein(a) and total plasma homocysteine levels are now established as independent atherothrombogenic risk factors.A distinctive pathophysiological feature of lipoprotein(a) is its antifibrinolytic activity, an effect dependent on plasma concentration and high affinity for fibrin of its small size apo(a) component. A stimulating effect of homocysteine on purified lipoprotein( a) has been proposed. However, little is known about their specific interactions in human plasma. We demonstrate by immunochemical, ligand-binding and plasminogen activation studies, that homocysteine modifies the structure and function of lipoprotein(a) in human plasma; it reduces the apo(a)/apoB disulfide bond causing the appearance of free apo(a) with high affinity for fibrin that inhibits plasminogen binding and plasmin formation (r= –0.995, p =0.002).These effects were evident particularly in plasma samples containing lipoprotein(a) with low af finity for fibrin and more than 22 kringles apo(a) isoforms. In contrast, for plasmas containing high fibrin affinity lipoprotein(a) (less than 22 kringles apo[a] isoforms) no significant change neither in fibrin binding nor in plasmin formation was observed. Furthermore, isolated apo(a) recombinants (10 to 34 kringles) that have been shown to display size-independent high affinity for fibrin were not affected by homocysteine, thus confirming lipoprotein( a) as its main target. These results suggest that the pro-atherogenic role already conferred to lipoprotein(a) by small apo(a) isoforms may be extended to large apo(a) isoforms if released in plasma by homocysteine,as this mechanism reveals their high fibrin affinity. Lipoprotein(a) and homocysteine may therefore constitute, if acting in concert, a new risk factor for athero-thrombotic vascular disease.
2005
Istituto di Biomembrane, Bioenergetica e Biotecnologie Molecolari (IBIOM)
94
75
81
lipoproteina(a)
fattore rischio patologico
omocisteina
4
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
262
Nardulli, M; Durlach, V; Pepe, G; Angléscano, E
01 Contributo su Rivista::01.01 Articolo in rivista
none
File in questo prodotto:
Non ci sono file associati a questo prodotto.

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/127897
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus ND
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? ND
social impact