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Merck

Fibrinogen is an antioxidant that protects beta-lipoproteins at physiological concentrations in a cell free system.

Atherosclerosis (2001-10-05)
I V Kaplan, M Attaelmannan, S S Levinson
RÉSUMÉ

Oxidation of beta-lipoproteins has been linked to the development of arteriosclerosis. Using a copper mediated cell free system to oxidize beta-lipoproteins, we found that beta -lipoproteins isolated from plasma were less susceptible to oxidation than lipoproteins from serum and that this was probably due to inhibition by fibrinogen, because removal of fibrinogen from plasma enhanced oxidation, while addition of fibrinogen restored inhibition. Fibrinogen inhibited conjugated diene formation and peroxide formation assayed by the xylenol orange assay (absorbance+/-confidence interval: 0.155+/-0.007 with fibrinogen vs 0.255+/-0.014 without) and retarded copper mediated oxidation of apolipoproteins in low density lipoproteins, reducing the distance of electrophoretic migration by 5 mm. The effect of fibrinogen was not due to chelation of copper, since it provided protection when hydrogen peroxide was substituted for copper as an oxidizing agent. At normal physiological concentration equivalents, fibrinogen showed superior antioxidant properties compared to albumin, melatonin, vitamin C and vitamin E and was superior to the vitamins when compared on an equimolar basis. Other studies have shown the fibrinogen to be more oxidizable than other major plasma proteins and to inhibit peroxide production. Because of its high mass concentration, we postulate fibrinogen is an important antioxidant protecting beta-lipoproteins in plasma and that it may be important in protecting lipoproteins in tissue spaces.

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Heparin−Agarose, Type I, saline suspension