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ORIGINAL RESEARCH COMMUNICATION |
1 From the Translation Metabolism Unit, Division of Diabetes, Endocrinology and Metabolism (RVS, KR, DI, and AB), the Section of Atherosclerosis (HJP and JG), Department of Medicine, the Department of Pediatrics (FJ), and the US Department of Agriculture, Agriculture Research Service, Children's Nutrition Research Center (RVS and FJ), Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX, and the Endocrine Service, Ben Taub General Hospital, Houston, TX (RVS and AB)
2 The contents of the manuscript do not necessarily reflect the views or the policies of the US Department of Agriculture. Mention of trade names, commercial products, and organizations does not imply endorsement by the US government.
3 Supported by NIH grants RO1-DK59537 and RO1-HL73696 (to AB) and by the Baylor General Clinical Research Center (NIH RR-0188).
4 Reprints not available. Address correspondence to A Balasubramanyam, Division of Diabetes, Endocrinology and Metabolism, Room 700B, Baylor College of Medicine, One Baylor Plaza, Houston, TX 77030-2600. E-mail: ashokb{at}bcm.tmc.edu.
| ABSTRACT |
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Objective: Our objective was to investigate abnormalities in dietary fat disposal in the pathogenesis of hypertriacylglycerolemia in HLS.
Design: We studied 6 nondiabetic men with HLS and 6 men without HIV matched for age and body mass index as control subjects for 8 h after consumption of an isocaloric meal containing 2 g labeled [13C3]tripalmitin. Chylomicron-triacylglycerol disposal was estimated from labeled [13C1]palmitate in the plasma chylomicron fraction, and [13C1]palmitate oxidation was estimated from the 13CO2 enrichment in the breath and CO2 production, over 8 h after the meal.
Results: HLS patients had significantly elevated concentrations of fasting plasma triacylglycerols in both chylomicron (
+ SE: 100.3 ± 49.5 compared with 29.2 ± 2.2 mg/dL; P < 0.01) and VLDL (82.4 ± 39.0 compared with 10.8 ± 2.8 mg/dL; P < 0.01) fractions. Chylomicron-triacylglycerol-derived [13C1]palmitate disposal was markedly lower in the HLS patients (3.09 ± 0.41 compared with 6.42 ± 0.18 mmol [13C1]palmitate/8 h; P < 0.001) in the 8-h postmeal period. Further, HLS patients had lowered storage of chylomicron-triacylglycerols (0.74 ± 0.38 compared with 5.05 ± 0.16 mmol; P < 0.0001) and elevated plasma [13C1]palmitate concentrations (2.01 ± 0.27 compared with 1.18 ± 0.16 mmol; P < 0.05) 8 h after the meal.
Conclusions: Patients with HLS have key defects that markedly impair postprandial disposal and storage of chylomicron-triacylglycerols. These defects contribute significantly to hypertriacylglycerolemia in HLS.
Key Words: Lipoprotein lipase lipolysis fat oxidation cholesteryl ester
| INTRODUCTION |
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| SUBJECTS AND METHODS |
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2 in at least 2 regions was required (8); 3) fasting plasma triacylglycerol concentration
200 mg/dL. All subjects with HLS had the "mixed" phenotype of HIV lipodystrophy (peripheral fat atrophy and central adiposity) and had had no HIV-associated opportunistic infections or illnesses for
5 y. Six healthy men without HIV and matched for age and body mass index were recruited as control subjects. All subjects had sedentary lifestyles (exercising <2 times/wk), and none consumed unusual diets or dietary supplements. All subjects were free of diabetes mellitus, thyroid disorders, hypercortisolemia, liver or renal impairment, and hypogonadism.
HIV RNA viral load and CD4 counts were measured in all patients with HLS. Five patients had been on stable, continuous highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) for
2 y and had undetectable HIV-1 RNA concentrations (<400 copies/mL) at the time of the study. One patient (subject 5 in Table 1
), with an elevated HIV-1 RNA concentration, had briefly interrupted HAART 3 mo before the study and had been placed on a new regimen 2 mo before the study.
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After a 10-h overnight fast, baseline blood and breath samples were collected at 0700, and the subjects ingested a 2-g bolus of 1,1,1-[13C3]tripalmitin thoroughly mixed into a 240-mL liquid meal (Ensure; Abbott, Abbott Park, IL), containing 250 calories (6 g fat, 40 g total carbohydrates, 9 g protein). Additional blood samples were collected every 30 min for the first 4 h and then hourly for the remaining 4 h of the experimental period. Breath samples were collected every 20 min throughout the experimental period. We used a Deltatrac machine (Sensormedics, Fullerton, CA) to perform indirect calorimetry for 30 min every 2 h from the first hour (total of 4 sessions during the 8-h study period).
Sample analyses
Plasma glucose concentrations were measured by the glucose oxidase method, and plasma insulin concentrations were measured by radioimmunoassay (Linco, St. Louis, MO). The chylomicron lipoprotein subfraction was immediately separated in duplicate from the plasma samples by serial ultracentrifugation according to the method described by Rifai et al (12). Briefly, the plasma samples were overlaid with a mock solution (11.42 g NaCl, 0.1 g NaEDTA in 1 L distilled water,
= 1.0063) in Beckman centrifuge tubes and subjected to ultracentrifugation at 33 500 x g for 30 min at 4 °C in a Beckman TL-100 tabletop ultracentrifuge with a TLA-100.3 rotor (Beckman Coulter Inc, Fullerton, CA). The chylomicron layer was removed carefully with a pipette. One aliquot of the chylomicron subfraction was used to measure triacylglycerols enzymatically with the use of a commercial kit (Wako, Baltimore, MD). Another aliquot of the chylomicron subfraction was subjected to thin-layer chromatography (TLC) after lipid extraction by Folch's method (13). The triacylglycerol layer was identified by fluorescence in ultraviolet light with a 0.1% solution of 2,7-dichlorofluorescein, separated, and hydrolyzed with the use of 15% methanolic KOH to release the fatty acids. Tracer-to-tracee ratios of palmitate derived from the chylomicron-triacylglycerol fraction were determined by negative chemical ionization gas chromatography-mass spectrometry with the use of a Hewlett-Packard 5989B gas chromatography-mass spectrometry system (Fullerton, CA). The pentafluorobenzyl derivative was prepared and analyzed by selectively monitoring ions with mass-to-charge (m:z) ratios of 255 and 256. Breath 13CO2 content was determined by gas isotope ratio mass spectrometry on a Europa Tracermass Stable Isotope Analyzer (Europa Scientific, Crewe, United Kingdom), monitoring ions of m:z 44 and 45.
![]() | (1) |
The [13C1]palmitate dose was calculated as
![]() | (2) |
The [13C1]palmitate remaining in plasma chylomicron-triacylglycerol after 8 h was calculated as
![]() | (3) |
![]() | (4) |
CO2/0.78 is the production rate of CO2 assuming that 22% of CO2 is retained in the body's bicarbonate pool, IE CO2 is the isotopic enrichment of CO2 (atom% excess), and AUC is area under the curve.
![]() | (5) |
Statistical analysis
Group data were compared by using paired t test with the use of the GRAPH PAD STATISTICAL SOFTWARE (Version 4.01; San Diego, CA). Differences were considered significant at P < 0.05. Data are expressed as means ± SEs.
| RESULTS |
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500 cells/mm3) in 4 patients. Lipodystrophy score assessment (8) revealed that all patients had peripheral and facial fat loss and abdominal obesity, and 4 patients presented abnormalities in every region (Table 1
Compared with the control subjects, the HLS group had higher plasma concentrations of fasting total cholesterol (P < 0.05), triacylglycerols (P < 0.05), and LDL cholesterol (P < 0.05) and lower plasma concentrations of HDL cholesterol (P < 0.001). No difference was observed in concentrations of glycosylated hemoglobin between the 2 groups; however, the HLS group had significantly elevated plasma concentrations of glucose (P < 0.05) and insulin (P < 0.02) in the fasted state, implying a higher degree of insulin resistance (Table 2
). Plasma concentrations of thyroid-stimulating hormone, free thyroxine, testosterone, and hemoglobin and indices of renal and liver function were within normal ranges in both groups.
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| DISCUSSION |
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Both of the main findings of the present study, defective disposal of orally ingested [13C3]tripalmitin from the chylomicron pool and a 3-fold higher fasting plasma chylomicron-triacylglycerol concentration, suggest an impairment of the function of LPL. Several factors associated with HIV lipodystrophy could plausibly interfere with LPL expression or activity and thus lead to impaired fatty acid uptake by adipocytes. The mechanisms could include direct toxic effects of antiretroviral drugs on LPL activity (14-16), competitive inhibition of LPL by other lipoproteins, and inhibition of LPL by elevated FFA concentrations (17). Antiretroviral protease inhibitor drugs are known to impair LPL function. In vitro studies by Ranganathan et al (14) showed that saquinavir (and, to a lesser extent, indinavir) inhibits LPL activity significantly in 3T3-F442A and 3T3-L1 preadipocytes. Indinavir can also inhibit the expression of LPL and other SREPB-1c-dependent genes (15, 16). Competition for LPL between triacylglycerol-rich lipoproteins in the postprandial state could also contribute to defective LPL activity in patients with HIV lipodystrophy. LPL activity is required for the removal of triacylglycerols from both VLDL and chylomicron particles, hence elevated concentrations of VLDL-triacylglycerols could impair clearance of chylomicron-triacylglycerols through competitive inhibition (18-20). Finally, the elevated plasma concentrations of FFAs observed in HIV lipodystrophy (8) could inhibit LPL activity through product inhibition (17).
On the basis of our previous findings that patients with HLS have a primary defect in adipocyte function in the fasted state, resulting in accelerated lipolysis, excess FFA flux, and, hence, increased production of triacylglycerol-rich VLDL in the liver, we suggested that the underlying mechanism is defective regulation of adipocyte hormone-sensitive lipase (8). The excess release of triacylglycerol-rich VLDL into the circulation explains in part why patients with HLS are hypertriacylglycerolemic. The present data show that markedly defective disposal of chylomicron-triacylglycerols in the postprandial state adds to the severity and persistence of the hypertriacylglycerolemia and that the potential mechanism underlying these abnormalities could be defective LPL activity. Thus, the key to hypertriacylglycerolemia in HLS is a dysregulated fat cell with functional defects in both hormone-sensitive lipase and LPL, resulting in hyperlipolysis and impaired triacylglycerol clearance.
The possibility that a defect in LPL function underlies the abnormal chylomicron-triacylglycerol clearance in patients with HLS is supported by the results of the chylomicron subfraction analysis. For 8 h after ingestion of the test meal, the plasma chylomicron fraction in the patients with HLS was rich in triacylglycerols and relatively poor in CEs (ie, the chylomicron lipid composition had high triacylglycerol:CE), whereas the chylomicron fraction in the control subjects had a lower triacylglycerol content and a higher CE content (low triacylglycerol:CE). The difference suggests that the patients with HLS formed fewer chylomicron remnants than did the control subjects. This interpretation is supported by the finding of low plasma CEs in subjects with HLS, as measured by TLC (Figure 2A
). These kinetic alterations in the disposal of triacylglycerols from the chylomicron-lipoprotein fraction are likely due to LPL dysfunction, because LPL activity preferentially removes triacylglycerols from triacylglycerol-rich chylomicrons that enter the plasma pool during a meal, resulting in triacylglycerol-depleted, relatively CE-rich chylomicron remnants. Consistent with this, Baril et al (21) have shown that patients with HLS have lowered activity of heparin-releasable plasma LPL.
Despite the markedly lowered disposal of chylomicron-[13C3]tripalmitin, the patients with HLS had more plasma nonesterified [13C1]palmitate than did the control subjects during the 8-h postmeal period. This apparent paradox can be explained by a review of the kinetics of LPL action with regard to the release and clearance of FFAs from chylomicron-triacylglycerols. Frayn et al (22) have reported that
50% of the FFAs released by LPL-mediated hydrolysis of triacylglycerols diffuse back into the plasma rather than enter into the adipoctye. Therefore, in normal health the "entrapment" function of LPL results in storage of only
50% of the FFAs released by the enzyme (22). Ware et al (23) have shown an impairment of the entrapment function of LPL in patients with HLS, whereby an even greater proportion of the released fatty acids enters into the plasma. They proposed that this defective entrapment of FFAs is responsible for the high fasting and postprandial plasma FFA concentrations seen in patients with HLS (23). The data in the present study indicate that, even though chylomicron-triacylglycerols were being hydrolyzed at a slower rate by the patients with HLS, a higher proportion of the [13C1]palmitate released from chylomicron-triacylglycerols was being left in the plasma instead of being taken up by the adipocytes. This explains the higher plasma concentration of nonesterified [13C1]palmitate 8 h after consumption of the [13C3]tripalmitin meal in the HLS subjects compared with the control subjects (Table 3
). This would also explain why patients with HLS stored a smaller proportion of the dietary [13C3]tripalmitin than did the control subjects.
The higher plasma concentration of [13C1]palmitate 8 h after consumption of the [13C3]tripalmitin meal would also explain why the patients with HLS "paradoxically" oxidize more [13C1]palmitate than the control subjects, despite slower release from chylomicron-triacylglycerols. A higher content of plasma [13C1]palmitate means that the plasma nonesterified palmitate being taken up by organs and tissues for oxidation is more richly labeled with the [13C1]palmitate tracer. Consequently, the patients with HLS would have oxidized more [13C1]palmitate than control subjects 8 h after consuming the meal, even though the absolute rate of whole-body lipid oxidation may not be increased.
Abnormal chylomicron-triacylglycerol disposal in patients with HLS results in persistent postprandial lipemia. Postprandial lipemia is a strong predictor of coronary artery disease, even stronger than low HDL concentrations (24-27), hence the abnormal postprandial lipid kinetics of patients with HLS add significantly to their cardiovascular risk. These data also have implications for treating the severe dyslipidemia of HLS. Traditionally, diets low in carbohydrate content (and, therefore, with a higher fraction of calories from fat) have been recommended for treating hypertriacylglycerolemia. However, HLS may be a condition in which a low-fat diet may have salutary effects. The recent recommendations of the National Cholesterol Education Program Adult Treatment Panel III are consistent with this notion and may be of benefit in treating the dyslipidemia of HLS (28, 29).
In conclusion, multiple pathogenic mechanisms acting in concert are responsible for marked and sustained hypertriacylglycerolemia in HLS. We have previously shown that the principal mechanisms in the fasted state are accelerated lipolysis with inadequate oxidative disposal of the released FFAs and, hence, increased VLDL-triacylglycerol production by the liver (8). In the postprandial state, a severe impairment of chylomicron-triacylglycerol disposal is likely due to a defect in LPL activity and entrapment of fatty acids by the adipocyte. Low-fat diets may be efficacious in treating postprandial lipemia and hypertriacylglycerolemia in patients with HLS.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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RVS contributed to the design of the study; was responsible for the execution of the experiments, data collection, laboratory analysis, and data interpretation; and contributed to writing of the manuscript. FJ and AB contributed to the design of the study and were primarily responsible for the analysis and interpretation of the data and drafting of the manuscript. JG and HJP measured the triacylglycerol concentrations, and HJP contributed to the lipoprotein data analysis and drafting of the manuscript. KR was responsible for coordinating the clinical aspects of the study, and DI performed the differential ultracentrifugation to separate the lipoprotein fractions. None of the authors had a personal or financial conflict of interest.
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