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1.
Sialic acids, occupying a terminal position in cell surface glycoconjugates, are major contributors to the net negative charge of the vascular endothelial cell surface. As integral membrane glycoproteins, LDL receptors also bear terminal sialic acid residues. Pretreatment of near-confluent, cultured bovine aortic endothelial cells (BAEC) with neuraminidase (50 mU/ml, 30 min, 37 degrees C) stimulated a significant increase in receptor-mediated 125I-LDL internalization and degradation relative to PBS-treated control cells. Binding studies at 4 degrees C revealed an increased affinity of LDL receptor sites on neuraminidase-treated cells compared to control BAEC (6.9 vs. 16.2 nM/10(6) BAEC) without a change in receptor site number. This enhanced LDL endocytosis in neuraminidase-treated cells was dependent upon the enzymatic activity of the neuraminidase and the removal of sialic acid from the cell surface. Furthermore, enhanced endocytosis due to enzymatic alteration of the 125I-LDL molecules was excluded. In contrast to BAEC, neuraminidase pretreatment of LDL receptor-upregulated cultured normal human fibroblasts resulted in an inhibition of 125I-LDL binding, internalization, and degradation. Specifically, a significant inhibition in 125I-LDL internalization was observed at 1 hr after neuraminidase treatment, which was associated with a decrease in the number of cell surface LDL receptor sites. Like BAEC, neuraminidase pretreatment of human umbilical vein endothelial cells resulted in enhanced receptor-mediated 125I-LDL endocytosis. These results indicate that sialic acid associated with either adjacent endothelial cell surface molecules or the endothelial LDL receptor itself may modulate LDL receptor-mediated endocytosis and suggest that this regulatory mechanism may be of particular importance to endothelial cells.  相似文献   

2.
The present study demonstrates that U-937 monocytelike human cells possess specific LDL receptors. 125I-LDL binds at 4 degrees C on the cell surface. The bound molecules are releasable by heparin. The reaction requires Ca2+ and the binding sites are sensitive to proteolysis. Unlabeled LDL compete with 125I-LDL, whereas HDL are ineffective. At 37 degrees C, LDL are internalized and degraded by a chloroquine-sensitive pathway. Tumor-promoting phorbol esters inhibit the binding of 125I-LDL to its receptor on U-937 cells. This inhibition exhibits temperature, time, and concentration dependence. At 37 degrees C, inhibition is 50% at 5 X 10(-9) M of TPA. After removal of phorbol esters, treated cells recover their 125I-LDL-binding activity in 60 min. The inhibitory activities of various phorbol esters are proportional to their tumor-promoting activities. Inhibition appears to be due to a reduction in the number of available LDL receptors rather than a decrease in receptor affinity.  相似文献   

3.
A convenient binding assay has been developed for the determination of low-density lipoprotein (LDL) receptors in homogenates of cultured and freshly-isolated normal and malignant human cells. Cell homogenates were incubated with 125I-labeled LDL and the ligand bound to the homogenate particulates was separated from the unbound ligand by filtration. When the particulates of the homogenates were subsequently incubated with heparin, a fraction of the bound 125I-LDL was released. Previous studies on intact cells have shown that heparin exclusively releases LDL bound to its cell surface receptor. The heparin-sensitive binding of 125I-LDL to cell homogenate particulates represents LDL bound to its cell surface receptor as judged from the following criteria: (a) it was quantitatively similar to the heparin-sensitive binding of 125I-LDL to intact cells, (b) it showed a direct correlation to the receptor-mediated degradation of 125I-LDL by intact cells, (c) no heparin-sensitive binding could be detected in homogenates prepared from normal erythrocytes or from cultured fibroblasts from a patient with homozygous familial hypercholesterolemia (two types of cell lacking LDL receptors), (d) it was dependent on calcium and inhibited by EDTA, (e) it was susceptible to treatment with pronase, and (f) it was heat-labile. The assay developed should be of value in determining the number of LDL receptors in tissues, since it is far less time-consuming and requires less material than currently available methods.  相似文献   

4.
Comparative studies were made of the metabolism of plasma high density lipoprotein (HDL) and low density lipoprotein (LDL) by cultured normal human fibroblasts. On a molar basis, the surface binding of (125)I-HDL was only slightly less than that of (125)I-LDL, whereas the rates of internalization and degradation of (125)I-HDL were very low relative to those of (125)I-LDL. The relationships of internalization and degradation to binding suggested the presence of a saturable uptake mechanism for LDL functionally related to high-affinity binding. This was confirmed by the finding that the total uptake of (125)I-LDL (internalized plus degraded) at 5 micro g LDL protein/ml was 100-fold greater than that attributable to fluid or bulk pinocytosis, quantified with [(14)C]sucrose, and 10-fold greater than that attributable to the sum of fluid endocytosis and adsorptive endocytosis. In contrast, (125)I-HDL uptake could be almost completely accounted for by the uptake of medium during pinocytosis and by invagination of surface membrane (bearing bound lipoprotein) during pinocytosis. These findings imply that, at most, only a small fraction of bound HDL binds to the high-affinity LDL receptor and/or that HDL binding there is internalized very slowly. The rate of (125)I-HDL degradation by cultured fibroblasts (per unit cell mass) exceeded an estimate of the turnover rate of HDL in vivo, suggesting that peripheral tissues may contribute to HDL catabolism. In accordance with their differing rates of uptake and cholesterol content, LDL increased the cholesterol content of fibroblasts and selectively inhibited sterol biosynthesis, whereas HDL had neither effect.  相似文献   

5.
Cultured extrahepatic cells possess a specific high affinity receptor for high density lipoprotein (HDL) that is induced by cholesterol delivery to cells. Current results suggest that HDL receptors on cultured human fibroblasts and mouse peritoneal macrophages promote reversible binding of HDL to the cell surface without internalization of lipoprotein particles. When 125I-HDL3 was bound to cultured cells at 0 degrees C and then warmed to 37 degrees C after removal of unbound lipoprotein, most of the cell surface-bound HDL was released rapidly (t1/2 = 3 min) into the medium without entering a cellular pool that was inaccessible to digestion by trypsin at 0 degrees C. This lack of internalization of HDL was evident under conditions where internalization of 125I-low density lipoprotein and 125I-transferrin were readily detected. When cells were exposed to 125I-HDL3 at 37 degrees C, only a trace amount of iodinated apoprotein remained associated with cells after treatment of cells with trypsin. Fibroblasts treated with medium containing increasing concentrations of cholesterol exhibited a dose-dependent increase in reversible, trypsin-sensitive binding of 125I-HDL3 at 37 degrees C without an attendant increase in trypsin-resistant binding. These results suggest that reversible binding of HDL to its cell-surface receptor without subsequent endocytosis of receptor-HDL complexes is the mechanism by which HDL receptors facilitate cholesterol transport from cells.  相似文献   

6.
Monoclonal antibodies directed against the low density lipoprotein (LDL) receptor have been prepared by immunization of mice with a partially purified receptor from bovine adrenal cortex. Spleen cells from the mice were fused with the Sp2/0-Ag14 line of mouse myeloma cells. The most extensively studied monoclonal antibody, designated immunoglobulin-C7, reacts with the human and bovine LDL receptor, but not with receptors from the mouse, rat, Chinese hamster, rabbit, or dog. 125I-labeled monoclonal antibody binds to human fibroblasts in amounts that are equimolar to 125I-LDL. In fibroblasts from 6 of 8 patients with the receptor-negative form of homozygous familial hypercholesterolemia, which have less than 5% of normal LdL binding, the amount of monoclonal antibody binding was also less than 5% of normal. Fibroblasts from the other two receptor-negative homozygotes bound an amount of monoclonal antibody that was much greater than expected on the basis of LDL binding, suggesting that these two patients produce a structurally altered receptor that binds the antibody, but not LDL. In normal fibroblasts, the receptor-bound monoclonal antibody was taken up and degraded at 37 degrees C at rapid rate similar to that for LDL. Fibroblasts from a patient with the internalization defective form of familial hypercholesterolemia bound the monoclonal antibody, but did not internalize or degrade it. The current data demonstrate the usefulness of monoclonal antibodies as probes for the study of the cellular and genetic factors involved in receptor-mediated endocytosis.  相似文献   

7.
B E Bihain  F T Yen 《Biochemistry》1992,31(19):4628-4636
This paper describes a mechanism for degradation of low-density lipoprotein (LDL) in fibroblasts unable to synthesize the LDL receptor. In this cell line, long-chain free fatty acids (FFA) activated 125I-LDL uptake; unsaturated FFA were the most efficient. The first step of this pathway was the binding of LDL apoB to a single class of sites on the plasma membrane and was reversible in the presence of greater than or equal to 10 mM suramin. Binding equilibrium was achieved after a 60-90-min incubation at 37 degrees C with 1 mM oleate; under these conditions, the apparent Kd for 125I-LDL binding was 12.3 micrograms/mL. Both cholesterol-rich (LDL and beta-VLDL) and triglyceride-rich (VLDL) lipoproteins, but not apoE-free HDL, efficiently competed with 125I-LDL for this FFA-induced binding site. After LDL bound to the cell surface, they were internalized and delivered to lysosomes; chloroquine inhibited subsequent proteolysis of LDL and thereby increased the cellular content of the particles. A physiological oleate to albumin molar ratio, i.e., 1:1 (25 microM oleate and 2 mg/mL albumin), was sufficient to significantly (p less than 0.01) activate all three steps of this alternate pathway: for example, 644 +/- 217 (25 microM oleate) versus 33 +/- 57 (no oleate) ng of LDL/mg of cell protein was degraded after incubation (2 h, 37 degrees C) with 50 micrograms/mL 125I-LDL. We speculate that this pathway could contribute to the clearance of both chylomicron remnants and LDL.  相似文献   

8.
The current paper describes a solid phase ligand binding assay for the low density lipoprotein (LDL) receptor that takes advantage of the domain structure of the protein. An antibody directed against one domain, e.g. the cytoplasmic tail, is adsorbed to a microtiter well. A detergent solution containing the LDL receptor is added, and the receptor is allowed to bind to the antibody. The wells are then washed, and one of the following radioiodinated ligands is added: 125I-LDL or an 125I-labeled monoclonal antibody directed against a different domain than the antibody adsorbed to the well. Under these conditions, the human LDL receptor shows high affinity for 125I-LDL and for 125I-IgG-HL1, a monoclonal antipeptide antibody directed against a 10-amino-acid "linker" between repeats 4 and 5 in the ligand binding domain. The binding affinity is the same at 4 degrees C and 37 degrees C. The binding of 125I-LDL and 125I-IgG-HL1 occurs with 1:1 molar stoichiometry, suggesting that the human LDL receptor binds 1 mol of LDL per mol of receptor. The acid-dependent dissociation of 125I-LDL and 125I-labeled monoclonal antibody from LDL receptors that is observed in intact cells was also shown to occur in the solid phase binding assay. We used the solid phase assay to demonstrate the secretion of LDL receptors from monkey cells that have been transfected with a cDNA encoding a truncated form of the human receptor that lacks the membrane-spanning domain. This assay may be useful in measuring the relative amounts of the intact LDL receptor in tissue extracts and the secreted receptor in transfected cells.  相似文献   

9.
To study the interaction between low-density lipoprotein (LDL) and granules from rat serosal mast cells in vitro, mast cells were stimulated with the degranulating agent 48/80 to induce exocytosis of the secretory granules. Subsequent incubation of the exocytosed granules with 125I-LDL resulted in binding of the labelled LDL to the granules. When increasing amounts of agent 48/80 were added to mast-cell suspensions, a dose-dependent release of granules was observed and a parallel increase in the amount of 125I-LDL bound to granules resulted. 125I-LDL bound to a single class of high-affinity binding sites on the granules. At saturation, 105 ng of LDL were bound per microgram of granule protein. The lipoprotein binding to mast-cell granules was apolipoprotein(apo)-B + E-specific. Thus 125I-LDL binding to the granules was effectively compared for by LDL (apo-B) or by dimyristoyl phosphatidylcholine vesicles containing apo-E, but not by high-density lipoprotein (HDL3) containing apo-AI as their major protein component. Neutralization by acetylation of the positively charged amino groups of apo-B of LDL or presence of a high ionic strength in the incubation medium prevented LDL from binding to the granules, indicating the presence of ionic interactions between the positively charged amino acids of LDL and negatively charged groups of the granules. It could be demonstrated that LDL bound to the negatively charged heparin proteoglycan of the granules. Thus treatment of granules with heparinase resulted in loss of their ability to bind LDL, and substances known to bind to heparin, such as Toluidine Blue, avidin, lipoprotein lipase, fibronectin and protamine, all effectively competed with LDL for binding to the granules. The results show that LDL is efficiently bound to the heparin proteoglycan component of mast-cell granules once the mast cells are stimulated to release their granules into the extracellular space.  相似文献   

10.
Canine HDL1 and canine and swine HDLc were fractionated into several lipoprotein subpopulations by heparin/manganese precipitation. The ability of the various subfractions of HDL1 or HDLc to compete with 125I-labeled low density lipoproteins (LDL) for binding and degradation by human fibroblasts was compared. The HDL1 or HDLc which precipitated at the lowest concentration of heparin (a concentration which precipitates LDL) were the most effective in competing with 125I-LDL for binding, internalization, and degradation. A striking characteristic of these lipoproteins was the occurrence of a prominence of the arginine-rich apoprotein. The HDL1 or HDLc subfractions which were not precipitated by heparin/managanese lacked detectable arginine-rich apoprotein and did not compete significantly with the 125I-LDL for binding and degradation. Furthermore, the lipid to protein ratio differed in the precipitable and nonprecipitable lipoproteins, with those which were most efficiently bound and degraded containing more cholesterol. Specific lipoprotein interaction with heparin and with the cell surface receptors may occur by a common mechanism; namely, through a positively charged region on the lipoprotein surface which may reside with the B and arginine-rich apoproteins.  相似文献   

11.
A group of proteins and polyamino acids with positively charged domains were shown to inhibit the binding of 125I-LDL to its receptor on the surface of human fibroblasts. The list of inhibitory proteins included platelet factor 4 (which has a cluster of lysine residues at its carboxyl terminus), two lysinerich histones, poly-L-lysines of chain length greater than 4, and protamine. These proteins were effective in the concentration range of 5–50 μg/ml. Two other positively charged proteins, lysozyme and avidin, did not inhibit 125I-LDL binding. Kinetic studies suggested that protamine was not acting simply as a competitive inhibitor with regard to the LDL receptor. In light of previous data showing that polyanions such as heparin and polyphosphates also inhibit 125I-LDL binding to its cell surface receptor, the current findings suggest that charge interactions are important in this binding reaction. In a related series of studies, a number of glycoproteins and their asialo derivatives as well as a number of sugar phosphates failed to inhibit 125I-LDL binding to its receptor in fibroblasts.  相似文献   

12.
The visible wavelength excited fluorophore 3,3'- dioctadecylindocarbocyanine iodide (Dil[3]) was incorporated into human low density lipoprotein (LDL) to form the highly fluorescent LDL derivative dil(3)-LDL. Dil(3)-LDL binds to normal human fibroblasts and to human fibroblasts defective in LDL receptor internalization but does not bind to LDL receptor-negative human fibroblasts at 4 degrees C or 37 degrees C. It is internalized rapidly at 37 degrees C by normal fibroblasts and depresses the activity of 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A reductase (HMG-CoA reductase) in a manner similar to that of LDL. It is prevented from binding to the LDL receptor by an excess of unlabeled LDL or by heparin sulfate. Identical distributions of dil(3)- LDL are observed on cells by either indirect immunofluorescence with fluorescein-labeled antibody or directly by dil(3) fluorescence. Upwards of 45 molecules of dil(3) are incorporated per molecule of LDL without affecting binding to the receptor. This labeling renders individual molecules visible by their fluorescence and enables the derivative to be used in dynamic studies of LDL-receptor motion on living fibroblasts by standard fluorescence techniques at low LDL receptor density. Observations with this derivative indicate that the LDL-receptor complex is immobilized on the surface of human fibroblasts but, when free of this linkage, undergoes a Brownian motion consistent with theory.  相似文献   

13.
Stimulation of LDL receptor activity in Hep-G2 cells by a serum factor(s)   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The regulation of low-density lipoprotein (LDL) receptor activity in the human hepatoma cell line Hep-G2 by serum components was examined. Incubation of dense monolayers of Hep-G2 cells with fresh medium containing 10% fetal calf serum (FM) produced a time-dependent increase in LDL receptor activity. Uptake and degradation of 125I-LDL was stimulated two- to four-fold, as compared with that of Hep-G2 cells cultured in the same media in which they had been grown to confluence (CM); the maximal 125I-LDL uptake plus degradation increased from 0.2 microgram/mg cell protein/4 h to 0.8 microgram/mg cell protein/4 h. In addition, a two-fold increase in cell surface binding of 125I-LDL to Hep-G2 cells was observed when binding was measured at 4 degrees C. There was no change in the "apparent" Kd. The stimulation of LDL receptor activity was suppressed in a concentration-dependent manner by the addition of cholesterol, as LDL, to the cell medium. In contrast to the stimulation of LDL receptor activity, FM did not affect the uptake or degradation of 125I-asialoorosomucoid. Addition of FM increased the protein content per dish, and DNA synthesis was stimulated approximately five-fold, as measured by [3H]thymidine incorporation into DNA; however, the cell number did not change. Cellular cholesterol biosynthesis was also stimulated by FM; [14C]acetate incorporation into unesterified and esterified cholesterol was increased approximately five-fold. Incubation of Hep-G2 cells with high-density lipoproteins (200 micrograms protein/ml) or albumin (8.0 mg/ml) in the absence of the serum factor did not significantly increase the total processed 125I-LDL. Stimulation of LDL receptor activity was dependent on a heat-stable, nondialyzable serum component that eluted in the inclusion volume of a Sephadex G-75 column. Uptake of 125I-LDL by confluent monolayers of human skin fibroblasts was not changed by incubation with FM or by incubation with Hep-G2 conditioned medium. Taken together, these data demonstrate that LDL receptor activity in Hep-G2 cells is stimulated by a serum component. Furthermore, this serum factor shows some specificity for the LDL receptor pathway in liver-derived Hep-G2 cells.  相似文献   

14.
Micromolar concentrations of oleate were found to inhibit reversibly the binding of low density lipoprotein (LDL) to the human fibroblast LDL receptor. The decrease in LDL binding caused a parallel reduction of both 125I-LDL uptake and degradation at 37 degrees C. At 4 degrees C, oleate was also found to displace 125I-LDL already bound to the LDL receptor. The effect of oleate was rapid, reaching 70-80% of maximum displacement with 5-10 min of incubation, and was closely correlated to oleate-albumin molar ratios. Partition analysis of unesterified fatty acids between cells and LDL showed that the inhibitory effect of oleate resulted mainly from an interaction of unesterified fatty acids with the cell surface rather than with the LDL particles. Using different unesterified fatty acids and fatty acid analogs, we found that the inhibitory effect was modulated by both the length and the conformation of the monomeric carbon chain and was directly dependent on the presence of a negative charge on the carboxylic group. At 4 degrees C, the inhibitory effect of oleate never exceeded half of maximum binding capacity. This limitation was associated with the ability of oleate to interact only with part of the population of LDL receptors which spontaneously recycles in the absence of ligand, as demonstrated by the fact that oleate did not induce any reduction of LDL binding after cell treatment with monensin in the absence of LDL. Our results indicate that unesterified fatty acids could participate in the control of LDL catabolism in vivo by direct modulation of the ability of LDL receptor to bind LDL.  相似文献   

15.
125I-Low density lipoprotein (125I-LDL)1 binds tightly to glass beads at physiologic pH and ionic strength. This binding shows saturability, high affinity (half maximal binding achieved at 10–15 μg protein/ml), and specificity (unlabeled LDL but not HDL or albumin competes with 125I-LDL for binding to the glass beads). In contrast to the binding of 125I-LDL to the physiologic LDL receptor on the surface of human fibroblasts and lymphocytes, the binding of 125I-LDL to bind to inert substances such as glass must be considered in the interpretation of studies in which 125I-LDL binding to membrane receptors is measured. The data emphasize the importance of correlating observed 125I-LDL binding with a physiologic action of the lipoprotein.  相似文献   

16.
The rate of uptake of oxidized low density lipoprotein (LDL) by mouse peritoneal macrophages is similar to that of acetyl LDL; but only approximately 50% of the internalized oxidized LDL is ultimately degraded, in contrast to the near-complete degradation seen with acetyl LDL. The objectives of this study were to determine if this was due to increased surface binding of oxidized LDL, different uptake pathways for oxidized LDL and acetyl LDL, lysosomal dysfunction caused by oxidized LDL, or resistance of oxidized LDL to hydrolysis by lysosomal proteinases. LDL binding studies at 4 degrees C showed that the increased cell association with oxidized LDL could not be explained by differences in cell-surface binding. Immunofluorescence microscopy confirmed intracellular accumulation of apoB-immunoreactive material in macrophages incubated with oxidized LDL, but not with acetyl LDL. The scavenger receptor ligand polyinosinic acid inhibited both the cell association and degradation of oxidized LDL in macrophages by greater than 75%, suggesting a common uptake pathway for degraded LDL and nondegraded LDL. Studies in THP-1 cells also did not reveal more than one specific uptake pathway for oxidized LDL. LDL derivatized by incubation with oxidized arachidonic acid (under conditions that prevented oxidation of the LDL itself) showed inefficient degradation, similar to oxidized LDL. When macrophages were incubated with oxidized LDL together with acetyl 125I-LDL, the acetyl LDL was degraded normally, excluding lysosomal dysfunction as the explanation for the accumulation of oxidized LDL. Generation of trichloroacetic acid-soluble products from oxidized 125I-LDL by exposure to cathepsins B and D was less than that observed with native 125I-LDL. LDL modified by exposure to reactive products derived from oxidized arachidonic acid was also degraded more slowly than native 125I-LDL by cathepsins. In contrast, acetyl 125I-LDL was degraded more rapidly by cathepsins than native 125I-LDL, and aggregated LDL and malondialdehyde-modified LDL were degraded at the same rate as native 125I-LDL. It is concluded that the intracellular accumulation of oxidized LDL in macrophages can be explained at least in part by the resistance of oxidatively modified apolipoprotein B to cathepsins. This resistance to cathepsins does not appear to be due to aggregation of oxidized LDL, but may be a consequence of modification of apolipoprotein B by lipid peroxidation products.  相似文献   

17.
Cholesteryl ester-loaded macrophages, or foam cells, are a prominent feature of atherosclerotic lesions. Low density lipoprotein (LDL) receptor-mediated endocytosis of native LDL is a relatively poor inducer of macrophage cholesteryl ester accumulation. However, the data herein show that in the presence of a very small amount of sphingomyelinase, LDL receptor-mediated endocytosis of 125I-LDL was enhanced and led to a 2-6-fold increase in 125I-LDL degradation and up to a 10-fold increase in cholesteryl ester accumulation in macrophages. The enhanced lipoprotein uptake and cholesterol esterification was seen after only approximately 12% hydrolysis of LDL phospholipids, was specific for sphingomyelin hydrolysis, and appeared to be related to the formation of fused or aggregated spherical particles up to 100 nm in diameter. Sphingomyelinase-treated LDL was bound by the macrophage LDL receptor. However, when unlabeled acetyl-LDL, a scavenger receptor ligand, was present during or after sphingomyelinase treatment of 125I-LDL, 125I-LDL binding and degradation were enhanced further through the formation of LDL-acetyl-LDL mixed aggregates. Experiments with cytochalasin D suggested that endocytosis, not phagocytosis, was involved in internalization of sphingomyelinase-treated LDL. Nonetheless, the sphingomyelinase effect on LDL uptake was macrophage-specific. These data illustrate that LDL receptor-mediated endocytosis of fused LDL particles can lead to foam cell formation in cultured macrophages. Furthermore, since both LDL and sphingomyelinase are present in atherosclerotic lesions and since some lesion LDL probably is fused or aggregated, there is a possibility that sphingomyelinase-treated LDL is a physiologically important atherogenic lipoprotein.  相似文献   

18.
A high-affinity heparin subfraction accounting for 8% of whole heparin from bovine lung was isolated by low-density lipoprotein (LDL)-affinity chromatography. When compared to whole heparin, the high-affinity subfraction was relatively higher in molecular weight (11,000 vs. 17,000) and contained more iduronyl sulfate as hexuronic acid (76% vs. 86%), N-sulfate ester (0.75 vs. 0.96 mol/mol hexosamine), and O-sulfate ester (1.51 vs. 1.68 mol/mol hexosamine). Although both heparin preparations formed insoluble complexes with LDL quantitatively in the presence of 30 mM Ca2+, the concentrations of NaCl required for 50% reduction in maximal insoluble complex formation was markedly higher with high-affinity subfraction (0.55 M vs. 0.04 M). When compared to complex of 125I-LDL and whole heparin (H-125I-LDL), complex of 125I-LDL and high-affinity heparin subfraction (HAH-125I-LDL) produced marked increase in the degradation of lipoproteins by macrophages (7-fold vs. 1.4-fold over native LDL, after 5 h incubation) as well as cellular cholesteryl ester synthesis (16.7-fold vs. 2.2-fold over native LDL, after 18 h incubation) and content (36-fold vs. 2.7-fold over native LDL, after 48 h incubation). After a 5 h incubation, macrophages accumulated 2.3-fold more cell-associated radioactivity from HAH-125I-LDL complex than from [125I]acetyl-LDL. While unlabeled HAH-LDL complex produced a dose-dependent inhibition of the degradation of labeled complex, native unlabeled LDL did not elicit any effect even at a 20-fold excess concentration. Unlabeled particulate LDL aggregate competed for 33% of degradation of labeled complex; however, cytochalasin D, known inhibitor of phagocytosis, did not effectively inhibit the degradation of labeled complex. Unlabeled acetyl-LDL produced a partial (33%) inhibition of the degradation of labeled complex. These results indicate that (1) the interaction of high-affinity heparin subfraction with LDL leads to scavenger receptor mediated endocytosis of the lipoprotein, and stimulation of cholesteryl ester synthesis and accumulation in the macrophages; and (2) with respect to macrophage recognition and uptake, HAH-LDL complex was similar but not identical to acetyl-LDL. These observations may have implications for atherogenesis, because both mast cells and endothelial cells can synthesize heparin in the arterial wall.  相似文献   

19.
125I-labeled and ferritin-labeled low density lipoprotein (LDL) were used as visual probes to study the surface distribution of LDL receptors and to examine the mechanism of the endocytosis of this lipoprotein in cultured human fibrobasts. Light microscopic autoradiograms of whole cells incubated with 125I-LDL at 4 degrees C showed that LDL receptors were widely but unevenly distributed over the cell surface. With the electron microscope, we determined that 60-70% of the ferritin-labeled LDL that bound to cells at 4 degrees C was localized over short coated segments of the plasma membrane that accounted for no more than 2% of the total surface area. To study the internalization process, cells were first allowed to bind ferritin-labeled LDL at 4 degrees C and were then warmed to 37 degrees C. Within 10 min, nearly all the surface-bound LDL-ferritin was incorporated into coated endocytic vesicles that were formed by the invagination and pinching-off of the coated membrane regions that contained the receptor-bound LDL. With increasing time at 37 degrees C, these coated vesicles were observed sequentially to migrate through the cytoplasm (1 min), to lose their cytoplasmic coat (2 min), and to fuse with either primary or secondary lysosomes (6 min). The current data indicate that the coated regions of plasma membrane are specialized structures of rapid turnover that function to carry receptor-bound LDL, and perhaps other receptor-bound molecules, into the cell.  相似文献   

20.
Low density lipoprotein (LDL) processing has been investigated in the subcloned human colonic carcinoma cell line HT29-18. LDL binding at 4°C was a saturable process in relation to time and LDL concentration. The Kd for LDL binding was 11 g/ml. ApoE-free HDL3 or acetylated LDL did not significantly compete with125I-LDL binding, up to 500 g/ml.125I-LDL binding was decreased by 70% in HT29-18 cells preincubated for 24 hours in culture medium containing 100 g/ml unlabelled LDL. Ligand blotting studies performed on HT29-18 homogenates using colloidal gold labelled LDL indicated the presence of one autoradiographic band corresponding to an apparent molecular weight of 130 kDa, which is consistent with the previously reported molecular weight of the LDL receptor in human fibroblasts. At 37°C,125I-LDL was actively internalized by HT29-18 cells and lysosomal degradation occurred as demonstrated by the inhibitory effect of chloroquine. LDL uptake and degradation by HT29-18 cells also resulted in a marked decrease in endogenous sterol synthesis. These data demonstrate that the HT29-18 human cancerous intestinal cells are able to specifically bind and internalize LDL, and that LDL processing results in down-regulation of sterol biosynthesis. Thus, intestinal epithelial cells possess specific LDL receptors that can be exploited to accomplish drug delivery and gene transfer via the receptor-mediated endocytosis pathway.Abbreviations HDL, HCL3 high density lipoprotein - LDL low density lipoprotein  相似文献   

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