Iodothyronine binding to plasma lipoproteins (Lp) and gel filtration elution patterns of cholesterol and triglycerides were evaluated in the total lipoprotein fractions (TLF) obtained from 10 healthy blood donors and 7 patients with hypothyroidism of brief duration, TLF (d < 1.210 kg/L) shown to be free of plasma T-4 transport proteins (TBG, TTR, HSA) was equilibrated with 0.3 nM I-125-labeled T-4, T-3 or reverse T-3 (rT(3)) and chromatographed on Sepharose CL-6B. Percent distribution of rT(3) among the Lp subtypes was similar in the two groups (in normals: VLDL = 4.2 +/- 2.4, LDL = 15.6 +/- 4.2, HDL = 79.9 +/- 5.2) but HDL in hypothyroid subjects bound significantly more T-4 (98.7 +/- 0.4 vs. 91.2 +/- 0.3%) and 4 (95.5 +/- 2.6 vs. 78.3 +/- 11.3%). Correspondingly less T-4 and T-3 was bound to VLDL and LDL. Whereas rT(3) elution coincided with the major HDL cholesterol peak (202 +/- 17 kDa) and was the same in the two groups, both T-4 and T-3 eluted with smaller HDL particles and differed between hypothyroid and normal subjects. T-4 eluted with somewhat larger HDL particles in hypothyroid subjects (176 +/- 24 kDa vs. 111 +/- 34 kDa) and T-3 eluted with smaller HDL (94 +/- 30 kDa vs. 148 +/- 31 kDa). The major HDL-cholesterol peak in hypothyroid subjects had a slightly but significantly greater mass than in normals (241 +/- 28 kDa vs. 218 +/- 14 kDa). The HDL elution patterns also differed: in normals there were from 3 to 6 minor peaks on either side of the major peak, whereas in hypothyroid subjects there were only 0 to 2 minor peaks. In conclusion, iodothyronines bind to relatively small size HDL subfractions and these are different for T-4, T-3, and rT(3); hypothyroidism of brief duration induces both quantitative and qualitative changes in iodothyronine distribution among lipoproteins and alters the microheterogeneity of HDL-cholesterol.

Altered thyroid hormone binding to plasma lipoproteins in primary hypothyroidism.

BENVENGA, Salvatore;
1996-01-01

Abstract

Iodothyronine binding to plasma lipoproteins (Lp) and gel filtration elution patterns of cholesterol and triglycerides were evaluated in the total lipoprotein fractions (TLF) obtained from 10 healthy blood donors and 7 patients with hypothyroidism of brief duration, TLF (d < 1.210 kg/L) shown to be free of plasma T-4 transport proteins (TBG, TTR, HSA) was equilibrated with 0.3 nM I-125-labeled T-4, T-3 or reverse T-3 (rT(3)) and chromatographed on Sepharose CL-6B. Percent distribution of rT(3) among the Lp subtypes was similar in the two groups (in normals: VLDL = 4.2 +/- 2.4, LDL = 15.6 +/- 4.2, HDL = 79.9 +/- 5.2) but HDL in hypothyroid subjects bound significantly more T-4 (98.7 +/- 0.4 vs. 91.2 +/- 0.3%) and 4 (95.5 +/- 2.6 vs. 78.3 +/- 11.3%). Correspondingly less T-4 and T-3 was bound to VLDL and LDL. Whereas rT(3) elution coincided with the major HDL cholesterol peak (202 +/- 17 kDa) and was the same in the two groups, both T-4 and T-3 eluted with smaller HDL particles and differed between hypothyroid and normal subjects. T-4 eluted with somewhat larger HDL particles in hypothyroid subjects (176 +/- 24 kDa vs. 111 +/- 34 kDa) and T-3 eluted with smaller HDL (94 +/- 30 kDa vs. 148 +/- 31 kDa). The major HDL-cholesterol peak in hypothyroid subjects had a slightly but significantly greater mass than in normals (241 +/- 28 kDa vs. 218 +/- 14 kDa). The HDL elution patterns also differed: in normals there were from 3 to 6 minor peaks on either side of the major peak, whereas in hypothyroid subjects there were only 0 to 2 minor peaks. In conclusion, iodothyronines bind to relatively small size HDL subfractions and these are different for T-4, T-3, and rT(3); hypothyroidism of brief duration induces both quantitative and qualitative changes in iodothyronine distribution among lipoproteins and alters the microheterogeneity of HDL-cholesterol.
1996
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11570/1872007
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