Abnormal HDL Apolipoprotein A-I and A-II Kinetics in Hemodialysis Patients: A Stable Isotope Study
Keiko Okubo*,
Katsunori Ikewaki,
Soichi Sakai,
Norio Tada,
Yoshindo Kawaguchi* and
Seibu Mochizuki
Divisions of *Nephrology and Hypertension Cardiology, Department of Internal Medicine, Jikei University School of Medicine, Tokyo, Japan; Hibiya Ishikawa Kidney Center, Tokyo, Japan; and Department of General Medicine, Kashiwa Hospital, Jikei University School of Medicine, Chiba, Japan
Correspondence to Dr. Katsunori Ikewaki, Division of Cardiology, Department of Internal Medicine, Jikei University School of Medicine 3-25-8 Nishi-shinbashi, Minato-ku, Tokyo, Japan 105-8461. Phone: 81-33433-1111; Fax: 81-33459-6043; E-mail: kikewaki{at}jikei.ac.jp
ABSTRACT. Low levels of HDL cholesterol and its major apoproteinconstituents apoA-I and apoA-II are common in patients who haveESRD and are undergoing hemodialysis (HD), but the metabolicbasis for the low HDL is poorly understood. This study aimedto investigate in vivo metabolism of apoA-I and apoA-II in fivenormotriglyceridemic ESRD-HD patients and compared it with fivecontrol subjects using endogenous stable isotope labeling methodscoupled with a multicompartmental modeling. HDL cholesterol,apoA-I, and apoA-II levels were markedly decreased in the ESRD-HDpatients by 39, 30, and 44%, respectively, in comparison withthe control subjects. Fractional catabolic rate of apoA-I wasfound to be significantly increased by 59% to 0.360 ±0.084/d in ESRD-HD patients as compared with control subjectsof 0.227 ± 0.076/d (P = 0.028), whereas the productionrates remained unchanged. Conversely, the apoA-II productionrate significantly decreased by 31% to 1.50 ± 0.61 mg/kgper d in the ESRD-HD patients in comparison with control subjectsof 2.17 ± 0.40 mg/kg per d (P = 0.047) with apoA-II fractionalcatabolic rate unchanged. These results revealed that the decreasedlevels of apoA-I are due solely to the increased rate of catabolism,whereas the reduced apoA-II levels are due primarily to thedecreased rate of production in ESRD-HD patients. This differentialregulation of apoA-I and apoA-II further supports the conceptthat apoA-I and apoA-II have distinct metabolic pathways.
Patients who have ESRD and undergo hemodialysis (HD) are atincreased risk for coronary artery disease (CAD) (1,2), whichis due at least in part to lipid abnormalities, typically calleduremic dyslipidemia (3). One of the major lipid abnormalitiesof uremic dyslipidemia is a decreased level of HDL cholesterol(HDL-C) (46). In general, low HDL-C is often associatedwith elevated triglyceride (TG) levels, and this inverse relationis also observed in ESRD-HD patients (7), suggesting a possibilitythat hypertriglyceridemia but not uremia per se may be an underlyingmechanism for the decreased levels of HDL. However, TG levelsin ESRD-HD patients in Japan (57) are generally lowerthan counterparts in Western countries (4,8), and HDL-C in ESRD-HDpatients is still lower than in control subjects with comparableTG levels (7), indicating that the decreased HDL-C is not duesimply to hypertriglyceridemia in ESRD-HD patients.
Plasma concentrations of HDL-C and apoA-I, the major proteinconstituent of HDL, have been shown to be inversely associatedwith the incidence of CAD (911). Although the mechanismby which HDL may exert a direct protective effect against developmentof atherosclerosis is not yet well understood, HDL has beenpostulated to facilitate the efflux of cholesterol from peripheraltissues and transport it back to the liver in a process calledreverse cholesterol transport (12). HDL metabolism is regulatedby several enzymes, including hepatic triglyceride lipase (HTGL),lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase (LCAT), and cholesterylesters transfer protein (CETP). Previous studies reported decreasedHTGL activity (13,14) and decreased LCAT activity (14,15) butinconsistent results in CETP activity (16,17) in ESRD-HD patients.Thus, it is important to assess whether and, if so, how thesealtered enzyme activities modulate synthesis and catabolismof HDL in vivo.
Unfortunately, little is known about the metabolic basis forthe decreased HDL in ESRD-HD patients. To our knowledge, noHDL apolipoprotein kinetic studies in ESRD-HD patients havebeen reported to date. One kinetic study was reported by Fuhet al. (18) in which only apoA-I metabolism was studied in predialysispatients by using a conventional radiotracer technique. Becausethe majority of ESRD patients eventually need maintenance dialysisand the number of ESRD-HD patients has been increasing, a betterunderstanding of the metabolic basis for the decreased levelsof HDL in ESRD-HD patients is an urgent task and should providea substantial clinical benefit. We therefore conducted an invivo metabolism study of apoA-I and apoA-II in normotriglyceridemicESRD-HD patients using endogenous stable isotope labeling methodscoupled with a multicompartmental modeling for data analysis.
Study Subjects
Five ESRD-HD patients (three men and two women) and five controlsubjects (all men) were recruited for this study. Eligibilitycriteria of ESRD-HD patients included age between 40 and 70yr, body mass index <25 kg/m2, fasting plasma triglycerideconcentration <150 mg/dl, and no evidence of diabetes. Thecause of ESRD was chronic glomerulonephritis in four patientsand polycystic kidney disease in one patient (patient 5). Theaverage duration of maintenance hemodialysis was 7.9 yr. Noneof the study subjects, including the ESRD-HD patients, had anyhistory of familial hyperlipidemia or were on medications thataffect lipid metabolism. The study was approved by the EthicsCommittee of Jikei University School of Medicine. All studysubjects gave their written informed consent to take part inthis study.
HDL Kinetic Study
The study subjects were admitted to Jikei University Hospital(Shinbashi Hospital or Aoto Hospital) before the kinetic study.The stable-isotope turnover study was begun at 5 a.m. after12-h fasting. Then, the subjects were fed hourly for 15 h, andeach meal consisted of 1/15th of their required calories. Inall ESRD patients, the study was performed 1 d after hemodialysis.Two plastic indwelling catheters were placed intravenously oncontralateral arm veins: one catheter was used for the tracerinfusion, and the other was used for the frequent blood samplingduring the study. Three times deuterium-labeled L-leucine (L-leucine-methyl-D3;Cambridge Isotope Laboratories, Woburn, MA) was administeredas a priming bolus of 1.0 mg/kg at 8 a.m., immediately followedby a constant infusion of 1 mg/kg per h for 12 h. Blood samples(15 ml) were drawn into tubes containing EDTA at a final concentrationof 1 g/L before the tracer injection; after 10 min, then 1,2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 10, 12, 13, 14, 18, 24, 36, and 48 h and anadditional sampling at 72 h in all control subjects. Blood waskept on ice, and the plasma was immediately separated by centrifugation(3000 x g, 20 min at 4°C). NaN3 and aprotinin were addedto the plasma at final concentrations of 0.5 g/L and 200,000KIU/L, respectively.
Isolation of Lipoproteins and Apolipoproteins
HDL was isolated by an ultracentrifugation from 4 ml of plasmaand proceeded for the analysis by a gas chromatographymassspectrometry (GC-MS) as previously reported (19). Briefly, isolatedHDL (density 1.063 to 1.21 g/ml) was dialyzed against 10 mMammonium bicarbonate, lyophilized, then delipidated. ApoA-Iwas isolated by preparative gradient SDS-PAGE (5 to 15%) (20),and apoA-II was isolated by preparative isoelectric focusing(pH 4 to 6) (21).
Determination of Tracer/Tracee Ratio by GC-MS
Samples were prepared for GC-MS analysis as reported previously(1921). Briefly, apolipoprotein bands were cut from gelsand dried overnight (90°C) and then were hydrolyzed in 6N HCl (amino acid analysis grade; Wako Pure Chemical Industries,Osaka, Japan) at 110°C for 24 h. The protein hydrolysateswere lyophilized in a Speed-Vac evaporator (Savant Instrument,Farmingdale, NY). Free amino acids were purified from plasmaor protein hydrolysates by cation exchange chromatography (AG-50W-X8;Bio-Rad Laboratories, Richmond, CA) and then derivatized tothe N-heptafluorobutyryl isobutyl esters and analyzed by GC-MSon a 6890 gas chromatograph connected to a 5973 quadruple massspectrometer (Hewlett Packard, Palo Alta, CA) in the chemicalionization mode, using methane as the reagent gas. Selectiveion monitoring at 365 m/z (M + 2 isotopomer) for unlabeled leucineand 366 m/z (M + 3 isotopomer) for labeled leucine was usedto determine the tracer/tracee (T/T) ratio by regression analysisof standards of known T/T ratios (0 to 10%) as reported previously(22,23). Each sample was analyzed at least two times.
Kinetic Modeling
A multicompartmental model (Figure 1) was developed to determineapoA-I and apoA-II kinetic parameters using an interactive computerprogram (SAAMII version 1.1; SAAM Institute, Seattle, WA) (24).In brief, compartment 1 represents the plasma amino acid pool,and plasma leucine T/T data are fitted by a three-exponentialequation using SAAM II numerical module. The equations belowdescribe the exponential function and consist of two parts,the first part representing T/T during the primed-constant infusionand the second part representing the T/T decay during the washoutphase after the termination of infusion at 12 h.
Figure 1. Multicompartmental model for HDL apolipoproteins. Compartment 1 represents the plasma amino acid (leucine) pool, used as a forcing function. Compartment 2 accounts for delay for assembly and subsequent secretion of HDL apolipoproteins. HDL apolipoproteins (apoA-I, apoA-II) comprise a single pool, compartment 3 (see the Materials and Methods for details).
At 12 h, "swit" is changed from 1 to 0 using a change conditionfunction in SAAMII. Therefore, during the infusion period, "Plasmaleucine T/T" equal to "infusion," then to "washout" after 12h. SAAMII can determine the best estimate of the parameters(Ai, Bi, and ai) to fit actual plasma T/T data, which are thenimplanted into the equation window in the multicompartmentalmodel and used as a forcing function. The plasma leucine T/Tcurve of the mean of five control subjects is shown in Figure 2.Fitting curve precisely traces the observed T/T points, andfractional SD of most parameters reside within 20%. Compartment2 accounts for a delay of HDL assembly and subsequent secretion.A single compartment (compartment 3) is allocated for the HDLapoA-I or apoA-II pool. Originally, an extravascular pool wasset up to allow the movement of HDL between the plasma and extravascularpool. However, the exchange pathway hit 0 after iteration anddid not improve the overall fitting in all study subjects. Wetherefore decided to eliminate this pathway. Plasma concentrationsof apoA-I and apoA-II were measured during the study periodto find that percentage changes of apoA-I and apoA-II were within5.6 and 4.4% in control subjects and 1.7 and 3.0% in ESRD-HDpatients, respectively, none of which was statistically significant.Therefore, we assumed that steady-state conditions were maintainedthroughout the study period, under which fractional catabolicrate (FCR; /d) was equal to fractional synthetic rate (FSR).Several studies (25,26) showed significantly increased plasmavolume (PV), whereas other studies showed similar to modestlyincreased PV (a review by Mitch WE (27)). Overall, results ofPV in ESRD-HD are inconsistent, partially depending on the presenceor absence of hypertension, malnutrition, anemia, and methodsused for PV determination (evans blue, iodinated 131I albumin,51Cr-labeled red blood cell). Thus, we adjusted the PV by hematocrit(Hct) values using a method recently reported by Mitra et al.(28). In brief, PV was calculated by the formula PV = BV(1 -0.86 * Hct), where BV denotes blood volume. On the basis ofthe literature (2932), BV is similar between ESRD-HDpatients and control subjects when normotensive ESRD-HD patientsare selected. Because the ESRD-HD patients in the present studyall were normotensive, they were considered to have no intravascularfluid expansion. We therefore used 7% as the percentage BV (%BV/body weight [BW]) in both ESRD-HD patients and control subjects(29,33). Taken together, production rate (PR; mg/kg per d),a product of FCR and PV, was calculated by the following formula:
Figure 2. Tracer/tracee (T/T) ratio curve for plasma leucine in control subjects. Plasma leucine T/T curve is used as a forcing function in the multicompartmental model for apoA-I and apoA-II (Figure 1). All data points are given as the means of five control subjects and fitted by the three exponential model using SAAMII numerical module (see Materials and Methods for details).
Analytical Methods
The plasma total cholesterol and TG levels were determined bythe automated enzymatic technique using a Toshiba TBA-80FR auto-analyzer(Toshiba, Tokyo, Japan). HDL-C was measured after heparin-manganeseprecipitation of plasma LDL-C was calculated using the Friedewaldformula. Plasma apoA-I and apoA-II concentrations were quantifiedusing immunoturbidimetric assays (34). CETP mass was measuredby a sandwich ELISA using two monoclonal antibodies, JHC1 andJHC2, as reported previously (35). LCAT activity in plasma wasdetermined by a method using dimyristoyl phosphatidalcholine-cholesterolliposome as substrate (36). HTGL activity in post-heparin plasmacollected 10 min after intravenous injection of heparin (30U/kg body wt) was measured as the rate of radiolabeled fattyacids liberation from [14C]triolein emulsion in gum arabic (13).
Statistical Analyses
Comparisons between groups were performed using Mann-Whitneyrank sum test. P < 0.05 was considered to be statisticallysignificant. All statistical procedures were performed usingSPSS software (version 9.1; SPSS, Chicago, IL).
The plasma and lipoproteins lipid and apolipoprotein profilesare summarized in Table 1. The average total cholesterol wassignificantly lower in the ESRD-HD patients (153 ± 11mg/dl) than in control subjects (175 ± 8 mg/dl; P = 0.016versus ESRD-HD patients), primarily as a result of a markedlydecreased HDL-C level (31.2 ± 5.3 mg/dl in ESRD-HD patientsversus 51.1 ± 4.6 mg/dl in control subjects; P = 0.009).In line with previous findings in the literature, LDL-C levelsin HD patients did not differ from those in control subjects.In parallel to the decreased HDL-C, both apoA-I and apoA-IIlevels in ESRD-HD patients significantly decreased by 30 and44%, respectively, compared with control subjects. It shouldbe noted that the magnitude of decrease in apoA-II was somewhatgreater than that in apoA-I. As a result, the apoA-I/apoA-IIratio was nonsignificantly increased by 40% in the ESRD-HD patientsin comparison with the control subjects (6.74 ± 2.50versus 4.83 ± 0.35; P = 0.17), thus indicating that themetabolism of HDL with apoA-I and apoA-II may be more profoundlymodulated than those with apoA-I but without apoA-II in ESRD-HDpatients. CETP masses were comparable between ESRD-HD patientsand control subjects, and, although not significant, LCAT activitieswere decreased by 30% in ESRD-HD patients as compared with controlsubjects, a finding consistent with previous studies (14,15).Likewise, HTGL activities in three ESRD-HD patients were significantlydecreased by 33% in comparison with the control subjects inour previous study (13).
The T/T ratio curves for apoA-I and apoA-II are shown in Figure 3.In both subject groups and proteins, the calculated curvesgenerated by the multicompartmental model using SAAMII yieldedreasonable fittings. The mean T/T ratio of apoA-I in the ESRD-HDpatients reached a higher level and thereafter decreased morerapidly than that in the control subjects (Figure 3, top). Incontrast, the T/T ratio of apoA-II in the ESRD-HD patients increasedto reach a somewhat higher level, but the disappearance slopewas almost identical to that in the control subjects (Figure 3,bottom). Higher T/T peaks in both apoA-I and apoA-II likelyreflect higher plasma T/T ratios during the infusion periodin ESRD-HD patients (9.32 ± 1.92%) than in control subjects(7.98 ± 1.77%).
Figure 3. T/T ratio curves for apoA-I and apoA-II in study subjects. T/T ratio curves for apoA-I (top) and apoA-II (bottom) in the control subjects () and the ESRD-HD patients (). All data are given as mean ± SEM and are fitted by the multicompartmental model using SAAMII.
The kinetic parameters are summarized in Table 2. As expectedby the T/T curve (Figure 3), the mean apoA-I FCR significantlyincreased by 59% to 0.360 ± 0.084/d in ESRD-HD patientsas compared with control subjects of 0.227 ± 0.076/d(P = 0.028). PR of apoA-I were not different between groups,although the average PR in ESRD-HD groups was 36% higher thanthat in the control group (P = 0.117). As a result, the decreasedapoA-I levels in ESRD-HD patients were primarily due to theincreased rate of catabolism. We found a different metabolicalteration of apoA-II in the ESRD-HD patients. The apoA-II FCRwere found to be similar between the two groups (0.196 ±0.059/d in the ESRD-HD patients versus 0.186 ± 0.031/din the control subjects), which is consistent with similar disappearancecurves in Figure 3. In contrast, the apoA-II PR decreased significantlyby 31% to 1.50 ± 0.61 g/kg per d in ESRD-HD patientsas compared with control subjects of 2.17 ± 0.40 mg/kgper d (P = 0.047). Therefore, the decreased apoA-II levels inESRD-HD patients were attributable to the decreased rates ofproduction.
In the present study, we demonstrate for the first time themetabolic basis for the two major HDL protein constituents,apoA-I and apoA-II, in ESRD-HD patients. The decreased apoA-Iand apoA-II levels are entirely due to the increased rate ofcatabolism for the former and the decreased rate of productionfor the latter, respectively. We (37) and others (38,39) havepreviously shown the rate of catabolism to be the determinantof the plasma apoA-I level, whereas the rate of production isthe determinant of the plasma apoA-II levels in normolipidemichumans. Therefore, apoA-I FCR and apoA-II PR as the primaryregulators for their steady-state concentrations are applicableto hypoalphalipoproteinemia associated with ESRD-HD patients.Different metabolic regulation between apoA-I and apoA-II providedfurther evidence that HDL subclasses have different metabolicpathways depending on the presence or absence of apoA-II onHDL particles (37,4042). Although this study is not ableto identify the primary cause of the increased catabolism ofapoA-I, several mechanisms might contribute to these findings.First, although statistically not significant, we found thatLCAT activities were decreased by 30% in ESRD-HD patients ascompared with control subjects, a finding consistent with previousstudies (14,15). Recently, Miida et al. (43) showed that LCAT-dependentconversion of pre1-HDL (nascent HDL) into -migratingHDL (mature HDL) was severely impaired in HD patients. Thisfinding, together with in vivo kinetic data by Colvin et al.(44), who reported that pre1-HDL was a precursor to largerHDL particles in African green monkeys, indicates that LCAT,in concert with apoA-I, play a crucial role on the conversionof premature HDL into large cholesteryl estersrich HDLparticles. As a result, the depressed LCAT activity could leadmore HDL particles to be removed directly from the circulationbefore nascent HDL matures, thus resulting in an increased overallapoA-I catabolism, as typically shown in patients with an inborndeficiency of LCAT (45). Second, an altered HDL compositionassociated with ESRD-HD (16) might lead to a dissociation ofmore apoA-I and subsequent transfer to TG-rich lipoproteins(chylomicron and VLDL), which are, in turn, removed at muchfaster rates than HDL and/or an altered affinity for cell-surfacereceptors including scavenger receptor class B type I. PlasmaC-reactive protein levels were mildly elevated (0.3 to 0.8 mg/dl)in four ESRD-HD patients, suggesting an inflammation in theESRD-HD patients. Inflammation has been shown to be associatedwith reduced levels of HDL (46). Under inflammatory conditions,serum amyloid A, an acute-phase reactant, is synthesized bythe liver and displaces apoA-I from HDL, resulting in an acceleratedapoA-I catabolism (47,48). Although we did not directly measureserum amyloid A concentrations, this can be a third reason.Beside LCAT, HTGL has been considered to be a factor modulatingHDL. In this study, preliminary results of HTGL activities inthree ESRD-HD patients were found to be decreased as comparedwith control subjects in our previous study (13). The decreasedHTGL activity is supported by the study by Shoji et al. (14).Rashid et al. (49) reported that HTGL accelerates apoA-I catabolicrate in rabbit models. Therefore, the decreased HTGL activitycan be a reason for delayed apoA-I catabolism, but our kineticdata show otherwise. Overall, it is indicated that alterationsin other metabolic factors surpass the effect of the decreasedHTGL activity in our ESRD-HD patients.
Of note is a nonsignificant increase in apoA-I PR in the ESRD-HDpatients (36% increase versus control subjects). The exact mechanismremains unclear at present; collective data of in vivo albumin(25,26,50) and fibrinogen kinetics (25) demonstrated that theseprotein synthesis were increased in ESRD-HD patients. They speculatedthat increased protein synthesis might represent a compensatoryresponse to decreased osmotic pressure caused by PV expansion.In this regard, increased apoA-I synthesis could be explainedby the same mechanism. Why was apoA-II production markedly decreasedin ESRD-HD patients in contrast to other proteins mentionedabove? We could not identify the exact mechanism, either, becausefactors that regulate apoA-II PR per se have been poorly understood.This could be due to a different tissue response to uremia,as apoA-I is synthesized in the liver and intestine, whereasapoA-II derives exclusively from the liver. Indeed, apoA-I andapoA-II show a different transcriptional response in an animalmodel (51). As reported previously, decreased apoA-II synthesisobserved in this study is consistent with the concept that apoA-IIsynthesis is a primary determinant for the plasma apoA-II levels.It may be that apoA-II synthesis in ESRD-HD is still low withthe compensatory action. This issue certainly deserves futurestudies.
The present observation contrasts with the previous observationby Fuh et al. (18), who found a delayed catabolism as well asa decreased rate of production of apoA-I in predialysis patientswith chronic renal failure (CRF). Although the exact reasonfor this discrepancy is not clear, several differences do existbetween the two studies. First, the patients in their studywere not treated by HD, whereas our patients all underwent HD.Although most studies observed similar HDL-C levels betweenpredialysis and ESRD-HD patients (4,5,8), HD may further exacerbatethe already-existing abnormal HDL metabolism in CRF patients.On the basis of previous kinetic findings, decreased apoA-Ialways associates with increased rate of catabolism, which comparesfavorably to the present study but not their study. Second,there are some differences in lipid profile between the twostudies. In this study, we carefully selected ESRD-HD patientswho had decreased levels of HDL-C but normal TG levels to minimizepotential confounding effect of hypertriglyceridemia on HDLmetabolism. In contrast, CRF patients in their study obviouslyincluded hypertriglyceridemic patients. This finding, togetherwith the fact that the apoA-I level in this study showed a greaterreduction (-29.4%) than their counterpart (-19.5%), could leadto different alterations on HDL metabolism. A third reason couldbe different labeling methods used. They used conventional exogenouslabeling with a radiotracer, whereas we used endogenous labelingwith stable isotope amino acids. In their study, it is not clearwhether the radiolabeled apoA-I is an autologous or a homologousprotein, and, if the latter is the case, injected apoA-I isnot the subjects own apoA-I, which would in turn behavedifferently from endogenous apoA-I. In addition, because theyused exogenous labeling, the tracer apoA-I may undergo a modificationduring the labeling procedure, which again causes a potentialerror in their study. Overall, a kinetic study using endogenouslabeling techniques needs to be performed in predialysis patientsto conclude their abnormality of HDL. Nonetheless, we believethat our data provide new and concrete information on apoA-Iand apoA-II metabolism in ESRD-HD patients.
HDL are heterogeneous in apolipoprotein composition and comprisetwo major HDL subclasses: particles that contain apoA-I butnot apoA-II (LpA-I) and those that contain both apoA-I and apoA-II(LpA-I:A-II) (52). We have previously shown that apoA-I on LpA-Iis catabolized faster than apoA-I on LpA-I:A-II (41). Furthermore,we found the LpA-I levels to be inversely correlated with therate of apoA-I catabolism, whereas the LpA-I:A-II levels closelycorrelated with the rate of apoA-II production in normolipidemicsubjects (37). These results thus indicate that apoA-I and apoA-II(i.e., LpA-I and LpA-I:A-II) have distinct metabolic pathways.Taken together, we propose that HDL metabolism in ESRD-HD patientsis altered as follows. The decreased apoA-II production in ESRD-HDpatients limits the ability of apoA-I to associate with apoA-II,thus altering HDL composition as LpA-I predominant. LpA-I is,in turn, catabolized at a faster rate than normal LpA-I, asevidenced by the increased rate of catabolism. The increasedproportion of LpA-I relative to LpA-I:A-II is indeed consistentwith previous observations by us (6) and others (53).
There are several limitations in the present study. Althoughnot significant, age and gender were not strictly matched betweencontrol subjects and ESRD-HD patients. In general, catabolicrates of apoA-I and apoA-II are somewhat faster in men thanin women (37). This finding, together with the fact that theESRD-HD patients included two women, indicates that differencein apoA-I FCR would have been greater if some control subjectshad been women. The effect of age is considered to be minimalrelative to gender. Second, the sample size of the study subjectsmay not be large enough to draw a solid conclusion. This iscertainly an inherent limitation of in vivo kinetic study, whichinvolves full collaboration of study subjects as well as labor-and time-intensive procedures to determine kinetic parameters.In this study, we carefully selected ESRD-HD patients who hadnormal plasma TG concentrations to minimize the potential confoundingeffects of hypertriglyceridemia on HDL metabolism. Therefore,we believe that the present study reasonably represents theunderlying metabolic defects of HDL in normotriglyceridemicESRD-HD patients. Although further accelerated apoA-I FCR arelikely to be expected, a caution should be exercised to applyour results to hypertriglyceridemic ESRD-HD patients, and thisrequires further study. Third, steady-state condition, whichis a prerequisite for the kinetic study, may not be maintainedin ESRD-HD patients who lack normal kidney function, but wefound that apolipoprotein concentrations did not vary significantlyduring the study period, thus indicating that perturbation oflipoprotein metabolism is minimal during the study period. Finally,we did not directly measure PV by the tracer dilution methodbut instead used a formula to correct PV by using Hct to calculatePR. Although the resulted PV expansion in our ESRD-HD patientsis comparable to a recent result obtained by the tracer dilutionmethod (25), PR should be interpreted with caution.
In summary, the present study established that decreased levelsof apoA-I are due solely to increased rates of catabolism, whereasreduced apoA-II levels are due to decreased rates of productionin normotriglyceridemic ESRD-HD patients. This differentialmodulation of two major apolipoproteins within HDL should providea basis to help develop a better strategy to ameliorate abnormalHDL metabolism and therefore prevent cardiovascular events inthese high-risk patients.
Acknowledgments
This study was supported by a Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Researchfrom the Ministry of Education, Science, and Culture of Japan(no. 11671054, 19992000).
We are indebted to Tomohiko Wakikawa for excellent technicalsupport. We thank Noriko Sato for secretarial assistance, thenursing staff of the Shinbashi and Aoto hospitals of Jikei UniversitySchool of Medicine for the care of the study patients, and studysubjects for participating.
Footnotes
Dr. Okubos current affiliation is All Nippon AirwaysCo., Ltd., Haneda Airport Ota-ku, Tokyo, Japan.
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Received for publication May 24, 2003.
Accepted for publication December 21, 2003.
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