Receptor-mediated lipoprotein transport in laying hens
- PMID: 1880624
- DOI: 10.1093/jn/121.9.1471
Receptor-mediated lipoprotein transport in laying hens
Abstract
In laying hens, VLDL and vitellogenin (VTG) are secreted by the liver and eventually taken up by the growing oocyte via receptor-mediated endocytosis. Both macromolecules bind to the same receptor, termed the VLDL/VTG receptor, localized on the oocyte plasma membrane. Once taken up by the growing zygote, apolipoprotein B, the major protein constituent of VLDL, is proteolytically cleaved by a chicken-specific cathepsin-D. Systemic cholesterol homeostasis in the chicken is maintained by expressing a different apoprotein B-specific receptor in somatic cells, which in terms of its function is very similar to the mammalian LDL receptor. The phenotype of the Restricted Ovulator hen, characterized by hereditary hyperlipidemia and the absence of egg laying, was identified as a lack of expression of functional VLDL/VTG receptors in the oocytes without affecting somatic apoprotein B receptors.
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