Apolipoprotein B-100: Difference between revisions

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(New page: In medicine and biochemistry, '''apolipoprotein B-100''' is an apolipoprotein that is "a 513-kDa protein synthesized in the liver. It serves as the major structural protein...)
 
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In [[medicine]] and [[biochemistry]], '''apolipoprotein B-100''' is an [[apolipoprotein]] that is "a 513-kDa protein synthesized in the [[liver]]. It serves as the major structural protein of low-density lipoproteins ([[LDL lipoprotein]]s; [[VLDL lipoprotein]]s). It is the ligand for the [[LDL receptor]] that promotes cellular binding and internalization of LDL particles."<ref>{{MeSH}}</ref>
In [[medicine]] and [[biochemistry]], '''apolipoprotein B-100''' is an [[apolipoprotein]] that is "a 513-kDa protein synthesized in the [[liver]]. It serves as the major structural protein of low-density lipoproteins ([[LDL lipoprotein]]s; [[VLDL lipoprotein]]s). It is the ligand for the [[LDL receptor]] that promotes cellular binding and internalization of LDL particles."<ref>{{MeSH}}</ref>


==References==
==References==
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Revision as of 10:33, 17 October 2010

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In medicine and biochemistry, apolipoprotein B-100 is an apolipoprotein that is "a 513-kDa protein synthesized in the liver. It serves as the major structural protein of low-density lipoproteins (LDL lipoproteins; VLDL lipoproteins). It is the ligand for the LDL receptor that promotes cellular binding and internalization of LDL particles."[1]

References