Lipid transport

See also Lipid-lowering agents

Key Points

  • TG
    • Energy reserve
    • Synthesized in liver and adipocytes
    • Stored in adipocytes
  • Cholesterol
    • Incorporated in all cell membranes in the lipid bilayer: increases membrane fluidity and stability
    • Precursor for synthesis of:
      • Steroid hormones (e.g., androgens, estrogens, mineralocorticoids, glucocorticoids)
      • Bile acids
      • Vitamin D
    • Transport in blood via lipoproteins
      • From the intestine to the liver: together with TAGs in chylomicrons
      • From the liver to peripheral tissues: via VLDL and LDL
      • From peripheral tissues to the liver (reverse cholesterol transport): via HDL and IDL
  • HDL
    • Transport cholesterol from peripheral tissues (e.g., atherosclerotic arteries) to the liver (reverse cholesterol transport), where it is excreted (e.g., via bile)
  • LDL
    • Transport cholesterol from the liver to peripheral tissues and arteries
  • VLDL
    • Transport hepatic triglycerides from the liver to peripheral tissues
  • Chylomicron
    • Secreted by the intestinal epithelial cells into lymphatics
    • Transport dietary triglycerides from the intestine to peripheral tissues

Lipoproteins (HDL, VLDL, LDL)

  • Protein is denser than fat.
  • Therefore, the higher the ratio of protein to fat, the higher the density of the lipoprotein particle.
    • VLDL: ~0.98 g/mL (high TG, to adipocytes)
    • IDL: ~1.0 g/mL ("intermediate" means an intermediate step between VLDL and LDL, not intermediate density)
    • LDL: ~1.04 g/mL (high cholesterol, to peripheral cells)
    • HDL: ~1.12 g/mL

I. Lipid Synthesis

This primarily occurs in the liver in the well-fed state (stimulated by insulin).

A. Fatty Acid Synthesis

B. Cholesterol Synthesis

II. Lipid Transport via Lipoproteins

Lipids are transported in the blood as lipoproteins, which consist of a lipid core and an outer shell of apolipoproteins and phospholipids.

Key Apolipoproteins

Transport Pathways

Pasted image 20231112143342.png

  1. Exogenous Pathway (Dietary Fat)

    • Chylomicrons are created in the intestine (containing ApoB-48) to transport dietary triglycerides.
    • In the blood, they acquire ApoC-II and ApoE from HDL.
    • Lipoprotein Lipase (LPL), activated by ApoC-II, cleaves triglycerides, releasing fatty acids to peripheral tissues.
    • Chylomicron remnants (rich in cholesterol) are cleared by the liver via ApoE.
  2. Endogenous Pathway (Liver-Synthesized Fat)

    • VLDL is created in the liver (containing ApoB-100) to transport endogenous triglycerides.
    • LPL degrades triglycerides in VLDL, forming IDL (VLDL remnant).
    • IDL can be cleared by the liver or further processed by hepatic lipase into LDL.
    • LDL ("bad cholesterol") delivers cholesterol to peripheral tissues via LDL receptors that recognize ApoB-100.
  3. Reverse Cholesterol Transport

    • HDL ("good cholesterol") is secreted by the liver and intestine (containing ApoA-I).
    • It picks up excess cholesterol from peripheral tissues.
    • LCAT (activated by ApoA-I) esterifies the cholesterol, trapping it in the HDL core.
    • HDL returns the cholesterol to the liver for excretion in bile.

Common steps for exo and endo pathways: bind to HDL, deliver TG to adipocytes, bind to ApoE receptor and cleared by hepatic lipase

Pasted image 20231012162049.png
Pasted image 20231012162748.png
Pasted image 20231012164231.png
Pasted image 20231012170344.png
Pasted image 20231012170358.png