The lysine-binding function of Lp(a) |
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Authors: | Nataya W. Boonmark Richard M. Lawn |
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Affiliation: | Falk Cardiovascular Research Center, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA, USA |
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Abstract: | The atherogenicity of Lp(a) is attributable to the binding of its apolipoprotein(a) component to fibrin and other plasminogen substrates. It can attenuate the activation of plasminogen, diminishing plasmin-dependent fibrinolysis and transforming growth factor-β activation. Apolipoprotein(a) contains a major lysine-binding site in one of its kringle domains. Destroying this site by site-directed mutagenesis greatly reduces the binding of apolipoprotein(a) to lysine and fibrin. Transgenic mice expressing wild-type apolipoprotein(a) have a 5-fold increase in the development of lipid lesions, as well as a large increase in the focal deposition of apolipoprotein(a) in the aorta, compared to the lysine-binding site mutant strain and to non-transgenic litter mates. Although the adaptive function of apolipoprotein(a) remains obscure, a gene with similar structure has evolved by independent remodeling of the plasminogen twice during the course of mammalian evolution. |
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Keywords: | apolipoprotein(a) atherosclerosis fibrin lipoprotein(a) plasminogen |
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