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. 1992 Nov 1;89(21):10193-7.
doi: 10.1073/pnas.89.21.10193.

Homocysteine and other sulfhydryl compounds enhance the binding of lipoprotein(a) to fibrin: a potential biochemical link between thrombosis, atherogenesis, and sulfhydryl compound metabolism

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Homocysteine and other sulfhydryl compounds enhance the binding of lipoprotein(a) to fibrin: a potential biochemical link between thrombosis, atherogenesis, and sulfhydryl compound metabolism

P C Harpel et al. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. .

Abstract

We have previously shown that lipoprotein(a) [Lp(a)], an atherogenic lipoprotein that contains apolipoprotein(a), which shares partial structural homology to plasminogen, binds to a plasmin-modified fibrin surface, and we have postulated that this interaction may be atherogenic. Moderate elevations in blood homocysteine, a relatively common condition, predispose to premature atherosclerosis. The reasons for this are not established. We now report that homocysteine, at concentrations as low as 8 microM, significantly increases the affinity of Lp(a) for fibrin. Homocysteine induces a 20-fold increase in the affinity between Lp(a) and plasmin-treated fibrin and a 4-fold increase with unmodified fibrin. Lp(a) binding is inhibited by epsilon-aminocaproic acid, indicating lysine binding site specificity. Homocysteine does not enhance the binding of Lp(a) to other surface-bound proteins. Cysteine, glutathione, and N-acetylcysteine also increase the affinity between Lp(a) and fibrin. Homocysteine does not affect the binding of low density lipoprotein or plasminogen to fibrin, nor does it alter the gel-filtration elution pattern of Lp(a). Immunoblot analysis documents the fact that homocysteine partially reduces Lp(a). These results suggest that homocysteine alters the intact Lp(a) particle so as to increase the reactivity of the plasminogen-like apolipoprotein(a) portion of the molecule. The observation that sulfhydryl amino acids increase Lp(a) binding to fibrin suggests a biochemical relationship between sulfhydryl compound metabolism, thrombosis, and atherogenesis.

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