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1.
Scavenger receptor (SR)-BI is the first molecularly defined receptor for high density lipoprotein (HDL) and it can mediate the selective uptake of cholesteryl ester into cells. To elucidate the molecular mechanisms by which SR-BI facilitates lipid uptake, we examined the connection between lipid donor particle binding and lipid uptake using kidney COS-7 cells transiently transfected with SR-BI. We systematically compared the uptake of [(3)H]cholesteryl oleoyl ether (CE) and [(14)C]sphingomyelin (SM) from apolipoprotein (apo) A-I-containing reconstituted HDL (rHDL) particles and apo-free lipid donor particles. Although both types of lipid donor could bind to SR-BI, only apo-containing lipid donors exhibited preferential delivery of CE over SM (i.e. nonstoichiometric lipid uptake). In contrast, apo-free lipid donor particles (phospholipid unilamellar vesicles, lipid emulsion particles) gave rise to stoichiometric lipid uptake due to interaction with SR-BI. This apparent whole particle uptake was not due to endocytosis, but rather fusion of the lipid components of the lipid donor with the cell plasma membrane; this process is perhaps mediated by a fusogenic motif in the extracellular domain of SR-BI. The interaction of apoA-I with SR-BI not only prevents fusion of the lipid donor with the plasma membrane but also allows the optimal selective lipid uptake. A comparison of rHDL particles containing apoA-I and apoE-3 showed that while both particles bound equally well to SR-BI, the apoA-I particle gave approximately 2-fold greater CE selective uptake. Catabolism of all major HDL lipids can occur via SR-BI with the relative selective uptake rate constants for CE, free cholesterol, triglycerides (triolein), and phosphatidylcholine being 1, 1.6, 0.7, and 0.2, respectively. It follows that a putative nonpolar channel created by SR-BI between the bound HDL particle and the cell plasma membrane is better able to accommodate the uptake of neutral lipids (e.g. cholesterol) relative to polar phospholipids.  相似文献   

2.
Apolipoprotein A-I (apoA-I) is an important ligand for the high density lipoprotein (HDL) scavenger receptor class B type I (SR-BI). SR-BI binds both free and lipoprotein-associated apoA-I, but the effects of particle size, composition, and apolipoprotein conformation on HDL binding to SR-BI are not understood. We have studied the effect of apoA-I conformation on particle binding using native HDL and reconstituted HDL particles of defined composition and size. SR-BI expressed in transfected Chinese hamster ovary cells was shown to bind human HDL(2) with greater affinity than HDL(3), suggesting that HDL size, composition, and possibly apolipoprotein conformation influence HDL binding to SR-BI. To discriminate between these factors, SR-BI binding was studied further using reconstituted l-alpha-palmitoyloleoyl-phosphatidylcholine-containing HDL particles having identical components and equal amounts of apoA-I, but differing in size (7.8 vs. 9.6 nm in diameter) and apoA-I conformation. The affinity of binding to SR-BI was significantly greater (50-fold) for the larger (9.6-nm) particle than for the 7.8-nm particle. We conclude that differences in apoA-I conformation in different-sized particles markedly influence apoA-I recognition by SR-BI. Preferential binding of larger HDL particles to SR-BI would promote productive selective cholesteryl ester uptake from larger cholesteryl ester-rich HDL over lipid-poor HDL.  相似文献   

3.
The severe depletion of cholesteryl ester (CE) in adrenocortical cells of apoA-I(-/-) mice suggests that apolipoprotein (apo) A-I plays an important role in the high density lipoprotein (HDL) CE selective uptake process mediated by scavenger receptor BI (SR-BI) in vivo. A recent study showed that apoA-I(-/-) HDL binds to SR-BI with the same affinity as apoA-I(+/+) HDL, but apoA-I(-/-) HDL has a decreased V(max) for CE transfer from the HDL particle to adrenal cells. The present study was designed to determine the basis for the reduced selective uptake of CE from apoA-I(-/-) HDL. Variations in apoA-I(-/-) HDL particle diameter, free cholesterol or phospholipid content, or the apoE or apoA-II content of apoA-I(-/-) HDL had little effect on HDL CE selective uptake into Y1-BS1 adrenal cells. Lecithin cholesterol acyltransferase treatment alone or addition of apoA-I to apoA-I(-/-) HDL alone also had little effect. However, addition of apoA-I to apoA-I(-/-) HDL in the presence of lecithin cholesterol acyltransferase reorganized the large heterogeneous apoA-I(-/-) HDL to a more discrete particle with enhanced CE selective uptake activity. These results show a unique role for apoA-I in HDL CE selective uptake that is distinct from its role as a ligand for HDL binding to SR-BI. These data suggest that the conformation of apoA-I at the HDL surface is important for the efficient transfer of CE to the cell.  相似文献   

4.
Scavenger receptor class B type I (SR-BI) mediates the selective uptake of HDL cholesteryl esters (CEs) and facilitates the efflux of unesterified cholesterol. SR-BI expression in macrophages presumably plays a role in atherosclerosis. The role of SR-BI for selective CE uptake and cholesterol efflux in macrophages was explored. Macrophages and HDL originated from wild-type (WT) or SR-BI knockout (KO; homozygous) mice. For uptake, macrophages were incubated in medium containing 125I-/3H-labeled HDL. For lipid removal, [3H]cholesterol efflux was analyzed using HDL as acceptor. Selective uptake of HDL CE ([3H]cholesteryl oleyl ether - 125I-tyramine cellobiose) was similar in WT and SR-BI KO macrophages. Radiolabeled SR-BI KO-HDL yielded a lower rate of selective uptake compared with WT-HDL in WT and SR-BI KO macrophages. Cholesterol efflux was similar in WT and SR-BI KO cells using HDL as acceptor. SR-BI KO-HDL more efficiently promoted cholesterol removal compared with WT-HDL from both types of macrophages. Macrophages selectively take up HDL CE independently of SR-BI. Additionally, in macrophages, there is substantial cholesterol efflux that is not mediated by SR-BI. Therefore, SR-BI-independent mechanisms mediate selective CE uptake and cholesterol removal. SR-BI KO-HDL is an inferior donor for selective CE uptake compared with WT-HDL, whereas SR-BI KO-HDL more efficiently promotes cholesterol efflux.  相似文献   

5.
Serum amyloid A is an acute phase protein that is carried in the plasma largely as an apolipoprotein of high density lipoprotein (HDL). In this study we investigated whether SAA is a ligand for the HDL receptor, scavenger receptor class B type I (SR-BI), and how SAA may influence SR-BI-mediated HDL binding and selective cholesteryl ester uptake. Studies using Chinese hamster ovary cells expressing SR-BI showed that (125)I-labeled SAA, both in lipid-free form and in reconstituted HDL particles, functions as a high affinity ligand for SR-BI. SAA also bound with high affinity to the hepatocyte cell line, HepG2. Alexa-labeled SAA was shown by fluorescence confocal microscopy to be internalized by cells in a SR-BI-dependent manner. To assess how SAA association with HDL influences HDL interaction with SR-BI, SAA-containing HDL was isolated from mice overexpressing SAA through adenoviral gene transfer. SAA presence on HDL had little effect on HDL binding to SR-BI but decreased (30-50%) selective cholesteryl ester uptake. Lipid-free SAA, unlike lipid-free apoA-I, was an effective inhibitor of both SR-BI-dependent binding and selective cholesteryl ester uptake of HDL. We have concluded that SR-BI plays a key role in SAA metabolism through its ability to interact with and internalize SAA and, further, that SAA influences HDL cholesterol metabolism through its inhibitory effects on SR-BI-mediated selective lipid uptake.  相似文献   

6.
Free cholesterol (FC) has been reported to efflux from cells through caveolae, which are 50-100 nm plasma membrane pits. The 22 kDa protein caveolin-1 is concentrated in caveolae and is required for their formation. The HDL scavenger receptor BI (SR-BI), which stimulates both FC efflux and selective uptake of HDL-derived cholesteryl ester (CE), has been reported to be concentrated in caveolae, suggesting that this localization facilitates flux of FC and CE across the membrane. However, we found that overexpression of caveolin-1 in Fischer rat thyroid (FRT) cells, which lack caveolin-1 and caveolae, or HEK 293 cells, which normally express very low levels of caveolin-1, did not affect FC efflux to HDL or liposomes. Transient expression of SR-B1 did not affect this result. Similarly, caveolin-1 expression did not affect selective uptake of CE from labeled HDL particles in FRT or HEK 293 cells transfected with SR-BI. We conclude that basal and SR-BI-stimulated FC efflux to HDL and liposomes and SR-BI-mediated selective uptake of HDL CE are not affected by caveolin-1 expression in HEK 293 or FRT cells.  相似文献   

7.
Despite extensive studies and characterizations of the high density lipoprotein-cholesteryl ester (HDL-CE)-selective uptake pathway, the mechanisms by which the hydrophobic CE molecules are transferred from the HDL particle to the plasma membrane have remained elusive, until the discovery that scavenger receptor BI (SR-BI) plays an important role. To elucidate the molecular mechanism, we examined the quantitative relationships between the binding of HDL and the selective uptake of its CE in the murine adrenal Y1-BS1 cell line. A comparison of concentration dependences shows that half-maximal high affinity cell association of HDL occurs at 8.7 +/- 4.7 micrograms/ml and the Km of HDL-CE-selective uptake is 4.5 +/- 1.5 micrograms/ml. These values are similar, and there is a very high correlation between these two processes (r2 = 0.98), suggesting that they are linked. An examination of lipid uptake from reconstituted HDL particles of defined composition and size shows that there is a non-stoichiometric uptake of HDL lipid components, with CE being preferred over the major HDL phospholipids, phosphatidylcholine and sphingomyelin. Comparison of the rates of selective uptake of different classes of phospholipid in this system gives the ranking: phosphatidylserine > phosphatidylcholine approximately phosphatidylinositol > sphingomyelin. The rate of CE-selective uptake from donor particles is proportional to the amount of CE initially present in the particles, suggesting a mechanism in which CE moves down its concentration gradient from HDL particles docked on SR-BI into the cell plasma membrane. The activation energy for CE uptake from either HDL3 or reconstituted HDL is about 9 kcal/mol, indicating that HDL-CE uptake occurs via a non-aqueous pathway. HDL binding to SR-BI allows access of CE molecules to a "channel" formed by the receptor from which water is excluded and along which HDL-CE molecules move down their concentration gradient into the cell plasma membrane.  相似文献   

8.
We have studied the effects of mutations in apoA-I on reconstituted high density lipoprotein (HDL) particle (rHDL(apoA-I)) binding to and cholesterol efflux from wild-type (WT) and mutant forms of the HDL receptor SR-BI expressed by ldlA-7 cells. Mutations in helix 4 or helix 6 of the apoA-I reduced efflux by 79 and 51%, respectively, without substantially altering receptor binding (apparent K(d) values of 1.1-4.4 microg of protein/ml). SR-BI with an M158R mutation bound poorly to rHDL with WT and helix 4 mutant apoA-I; the helix 6 mutant restored tight binding to SR-BI(M158R) (K(d) values of 48, 60, and 7 microg of protein/ml, respectively). SR-BI(M158R)-mediated cholesterol efflux rates, normalized for binding, were high for all three rHDLs (71-111% of control). In contrast, absolute (12-19%) and binding-corrected (24-47%) efflux rates for all three rHDLs mediated by SR-BI with Q402R/Q418R mutations were very low. We propose that formation of a productive complex between apoA-I in rHDL and SR-BI, in which the lipoprotein and the receptor must either be precisely aligned or have the capacity to undergo appropriate conformational changes, is required for efficient SR-BI-mediated cholesterol efflux. Some mutations in apoA-I and/or SR-BI can result in high affinity, but non-productive, binding that does not permit efficient cholesterol efflux.  相似文献   

9.
Scavenger receptor class B type I (SR-BI) and ABCA1 are structurally dissimilar cell surface proteins that play key roles in HDL metabolism. SR-BI is a receptor that binds HDL with high affinity and mediates both the selective lipid uptake of cholesteryl esters from lipid-rich HDL to cells and the efflux of unesterified cholesterol from cells to HDL. ABCA1 mediates the efflux of unesterified cholesterol and phospholipids from cells to lipid-poor apolipoprotein A-I (apoA-I). The activities of ABCA1 and other ATP binding cassette superfamily members are inhibited by the drug glyburide, and SR-BI-mediated lipid transport is blocked by small molecule inhibitors called BLTs. Here, we show that one BLT, [1-(2-methoxy-phenyl)-3-naphthalen-2-yl-urea] (BLT-4), blocked ABCA1-mediated cholesterol efflux to lipid-poor apoA-I at a potency similar to that for its inhibition of SR-BI (IC(50) approximately 55-60 microM). Reciprocally, glyburide blocked SR-BI-mediated selective lipid uptake and efflux at a potency similar to that for its inhibition of ABCA1 (IC(50) approximately 275-300 microM). As is the case with BLTs, glyburide increased the apparent affinity of HDL binding to SR-BI. The reciprocal inhibition of SR-BI and ABCA1 by BLT-4 and glyburide raises the possibility that these proteins may share similar or common steps in their mechanisms of lipid transport.  相似文献   

10.
In addition to its effect on high density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesteryl ester (CE) uptake, scavenger receptor BI (SR-BI) was recently reported to stimulate free cholesterol (FC) flux from Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells stably expressing mouse SR-BI, a novel function of SR-BI that may play a role in cholesterol removal from the vessel wall where the receptor can be found. It is possible that SR-BI stimulates flux simply by tethering acceptor HDL particles in close apposition to the cell surface thereby facilitating the movement of cholesterol between the plasma membrane and HDL. To test this, we used transiently transfected cells and compared the closely related class B scavenger receptors mouse SR-BI and rat CD36 for their ability to stimulate cholesterol efflux as both receptors bind HDL with high affinity. The results showed that, although acceptor binding to SR-BI may contribute to efflux to a modest extent, the major stimulation of FC efflux occurs independently of acceptor binding to cell surface receptors. Instead our data indicate that SR-BI mediates alterations to membrane FC domains which provoke enhanced bidirectional FC flux between cells and extracellular acceptors.  相似文献   

11.
Lipid and cholesterol metabolism in the postprandial phase is associated with both quantitative and qualitative remodeling of HDL particle subspecies that may influence their anti-atherogenic functions in the reverse cholesterol transport pathway. We evaluated the capacity of whole plasma or isolated HDL particles to mediate cellular free cholesterol (FC) efflux, cholesteryl ester transfer protein (CETP)-mediated cholesteryl ester (CE) transfer, and selective hepatic CE uptake during the postprandial phase in subjects displaying type IIB hyperlipidemia (n = 16). Postprandial, large HDL2 displayed an enhanced capacity to mediate FC efflux via both scavenger receptor class B type I (SR-BI)-dependent (+12%; P < 0.02) and ATP binding cassette transporter G1 (ABCG1)-dependent (+31%; P < 0.008) pathways in in vitro cell systems. In addition, the capacity of whole postprandial plasma (4 h and 8 h postprandially) to mediate cellular FC efflux via the ABCA1-dependent pathway was significantly increased (+19%; P < 0.0003). Concomitantly, postprandial lipemia was associated with elevated endogenous CE transfer rates from HDL2 to apoB lipoproteins and with attenuated capacity (−17%; P < 0.02) of total HDL to deliver CE to hepatic cells. Postprandial lipemia enhanced SR-BI and ABCG1-dependent efflux to large HDL2 particles. However, postprandial lipemia is equally associated with deleterious features by enhancing formation of CE-enriched, triglyceride-rich lipoprotein particles through the action of CETP and by reducing the direct return of HDL-CE to the liver.  相似文献   

12.
The severe depletion of cholesteryl ester (CE) in steroidogenic cells of apoA-I(-/-) mice suggests that apolipoprotein (apo) A-I plays a specific role in the high density lipoprotein (HDL) CE-selective uptake process mediated by scavenger receptor BI (SR-BI) in vivo. The nature of this role, however, is unclear because a variety of apolipoproteins bind to SR-BI expressed in transfected cells. In this study the role of apoA-I in SR-BI-mediated HDL CE-selective uptake was tested via analyses of the biochemical properties of apoA-I(-/-) HDL and its interaction with SR-BI on adrenocortical cells, hepatoma cells, and cells expressing a transfected SR-BI. apoA-I(-/-) HDL are large heterogeneous particles with a core consisting predominantly of CE and a surface enriched in phospholipid, free cholesterol, apoA-II, and apoE. Functional analysis showed apoA-I(-/-) HDL to bind to SR-BI with the same or higher affinity as compared with apoA-I(+/+) HDL, but apoA-I(-/-) HDL showed a 2-3-fold decrease in the V(max) for CE transfer from the HDL particle to adrenal cells. These results indicate that the absence of apoA-I results in HDL particles with a reduced capacity for SR-BI-mediated CE-selective uptake. The reduced V(max) illustrates that HDL properties necessary for binding to SR-BI are distinct from those properties necessary for the transfer of HDL CE from the core of the HDL particle to the plasma membrane. The reduced V(max) for HDL CE-selective uptake likely contributes to the severe reduction in CE accumulation in steroidogenic cells of apoA-I(-/-) mice.  相似文献   

13.
14.
Scavenger receptor BI (SR-BI) mediates the selective uptake of high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesteryl ester (CE), a process by which HDL CE is taken into the cell without degradation of the HDL particle. In addition, SR-BI stimulates the bi-directional flux of free cholesterol (FC) between cells and lipoproteins, an activity that may be responsible for net cholesterol efflux from peripheral cells as well as the rapid hepatic clearance of FC from plasma HDL. SR-BI also increases cellular cholesterol mass and alters cholesterol distribution in plasma membrane domains as judged by the enhanced sensitivity of membrane cholesterol to extracellular cholesterol oxidase. In contrast, CD36, a closely related class B scavenger receptor, has none of these activities despite binding HDL with high affinity. In the present study, analyses of chimeric SR-BI/CD36 receptors and domain-deleted SR-BI have been used to test the various domains of SR-BI for functional activities related to HDL CE selective uptake, bi-directional FC flux, and the alteration of membrane cholesterol mass and distribution. The results show that each of these activities localizes to the extracellular domain of SR-BI. The N-terminal cytoplasmic tail and transmembrane domains appear to play no role in these activities other than targeting the receptor to the plasma membrane. The C-terminal tail of SR-BI is dispensable for activity as well for targeting to the plasma membrane. Thus, multiple distinct functional activities are localized to the SR-BI extracellular domain.  相似文献   

15.
Scavenger receptor class B type I (SR-BI) delivers cholesterol ester from HDL to cells via a selective uptake mechanism, whereby lipid is transferred from the core of the particle without concomitant degradation of the protein moiety. The precise metabolic fate of HDL particles after selective lipid uptake is not known. To characterize SR-BI-mediated HDL processing in vivo, we expressed high levels of this receptor in livers of apoA-I(-/-) mice by adenoviral vector gene transfer, and then injected the mice with a bolus of human HDL(2) traced with (125)I-dilactitol tyramine. HDL recovered from apoA-I(-/-) mice over-expressing SR-BI was significantly smaller than HDL recovered from control mice as measured by non-denaturing gel electrophoresis. When injected into C57BL/6 mice, these HDL "remnants" were rapidly converted to HDL(2)-sized lipoprotein particles, and were cleared from the plasma at a rate similar to HDL(2). In assays in cultured cells, HDL remnants did not stimulate ATP-binding cassette transporter A1-dependent cholesterol efflux. When mixed with mouse plasma ex vivo, HDL remnants rapidly converted to larger HDL particles. These studies identify a previously ill-defined pathway in HDL metabolism, whereby SR-BI generates small, dense HDL particles that are rapidly remodeled in plasma. This remodeling pathway may represent a process that is important in determining the rate of apoA-I catabolism and HDL-mediated reverse cholesterol transport.  相似文献   

16.
High density lipoprotein (HDL) represents a mixture of particles containing either apoA-I and apoA-II (LpA-I/A-II) or apoA-I without apoA-II (LpA-I). Differences in the function and metabolism of LpA-I and LpA-I/A-II have been reported, and studies in transgenic mice have suggested that apoA-II is pro-atherogenic in contrast to anti-atherogenic apoA-I. The molecular basis for these observations is unclear. The scavenger receptor BI (SR-BI) is an HDL receptor that plays a key role in HDL metabolism. In this study we investigated the abilities of apoA-I and apoA-II to mediate SR-BI-specific binding and selective uptake of cholesterol ester using reconstituted HDLs (rHDLs) that were homogeneous in size and apolipoprotein content. Particles were labeled in the protein (with (125)I) and in the lipid (with [(3)H]cholesterol ether) components and SR-BI-specific events were analyzed in SR-BI-transfected Chinese hamster ovary cells. At 1 microg/ml apolipoprotein, SR-BI-mediated cell association of palmitoyloleoylphosphatidylcholine-containing AI-rHDL was significantly greater (3-fold) than that of AI/AII-rHDL, with a lower K(d) and a higher B(max) for AI-rHDL as compared with AI/AII-rHDL. Unexpectedly, selective cholesterol ester uptake from AI/AII-rHDL was not compromised compared with AI-rHDL, despite decreased binding. The efficiency of selective cholesterol ester uptake in terms of SR-BI-associated rHDL was 4-5-fold greater for AI/AII-rHDL than AI-rHDL. These results are consistent with a two-step mechanism in which SR-BI binds ligand and then mediates selective cholesterol ester uptake with an efficiency dependent on the composition of the ligand. ApoA-II decreases binding but increases selective uptake. These findings show that apoA-II can exert a significant influence on selective cholesterol ester uptake by SR-BI and may consequently influence the metabolism and function of HDL, as well as the pathway of reverse cholesterol transport.  相似文献   

17.
Papale GA  Hanson PJ  Sahoo D 《Biochemistry》2011,50(28):6245-6254
Scavenger receptor class B type I (SR-BI) binds high-density lipoprotein (HDL) and mediates the selective uptake of cholesteryl esters (CE). Although the extracellular domain of SR-BI is critical for function, the structural characteristics of this region remain elusive. Using sulfhydryl labeling strategies, we report the novel finding that all six cysteine (Cys) residues in the extracellular domain of SR-BI are involved in disulfide bond formation that is intramolecular by nature. We hypothesized that an SR-BI conformation stabilized by extracellular disulfide bonds is a prerequisite for SR-BI-mediated cholesterol transport. Thus, single-Cys mutant SR-BI receptors (C251S-, C280S-, C321S-, C323S-, C334S-, and C384S-SR-BI), as well as Cys-less SR-BI, a mutant SR-BI receptor void of all Cys residues, were created, and plasma membrane localization was confirmed. Functional assays revealed that C280S-, C321S-, C323S-, and C334S-SR-BI and Cys-less SR-BI mutant receptors displayed weakened HDL binding and subsequent selective uptake of HDL-CE. However, only C323S-SR-BI and Cys-less SR-BI were unable to mediate wild-type levels of efflux of free cholesterol (FC) to HDL. None of the Cys mutations disrupted SR-BI's ability to redistribute plasma membrane FC. Taken together, the intramolecular disulfide bonds in the extracellular domain of SR-BI appear to maintain the receptor in a conformation integral to its cholesterol transport functions.  相似文献   

18.
To study the mechanisms of hepatic HDL formation, we investigated the roles of ABCA1, ABCG1, and SR-BI in nascent HDL formation in primary hepatocytes isolated from mice deficient in ABCA1, ABCG1, or SR-BI and from wild-type (WT) mice. Under basal conditions, in WT hepatocytes, cholesterol efflux to exogenous apoA-I was accompanied by conversion of apoA-I to HDL-sized particles. LXR activation by T0901317 markedly enhanced the formation of larger HDL-sized particles as well as cellular cholesterol efflux to apoA-I. Glyburide treatment completely abolished the formation of 7.4 nm diameter and greater particles but led to the formation of novel 7.2 nm-sized particles. However, cells lacking ABCA1 failed to form such particles. ABCG1-deficient cells showed similar capacity to efflux cholesterol to apoA-I and to form nascent HDL particles compared with WT cells. Cholesterol efflux to apoA-I and nascent HDL formation were slightly but significantly enhanced in SR-BI-deficient cells compared with WT cells under basal but not LXR activated conditions. As in WT but not in ABCA1-deficient hepatocytes, 7.2 nm-sized particles generated by glyburide treatment were also detected in ABCG1-deficient and SR-BI-deficient hepatocytes. Our data indicate that hepatic nascent HDL formation is highly dependent on ABCA1 but not on ABCG1 or SR-BI.  相似文献   

19.
The HDL receptor scavenger receptor class B type I (SR-BI) binds HDL and mediates the selective uptake of cholesteryl ester. We previously showed that remnants, produced when human HDL(2) is catabolized in mice overexpressing SR-BI, become incrementally smaller, ultimately consisting of small alpha-migrating particles, distinct from pre-beta HDL. When mixed with mouse plasma, some remnant particles rapidly increase in size by associating with HDL without the mediation of cholesteryl ester transfer protein, LCAT, or phospholipid transfer protein. Here, we show that processing of HDL(2) by SR-BI-overexpressing mice resulted in the preferential loss of apolipoprotein A-II (apoA-II). Short-term processing generated two distinct, small alpha-migrating particles. One particle (8.0 nm diameter) contained apoA-I and apoA-II; the other particle (7.7 nm diameter) contained only apoA-I. With extensive SR-BI processing, only the 7.7 nm particle remained. Only the 8.0 nm remnants were able to associate with HDL. Compared with HDL(2), this remnant was more readily taken up by the liver than by the kidney. We conclude that SR-BI-generated HDL remnants consist of particles with or without apoA-II and that only those containing apoA-II associate with HDL in an enzyme-independent manner. Extensive SR-BI processing generates small apoA-II-depleted particles unable to reassociate with HDL and readily taken up by the liver. This represents a pathway by which apoA-I and apoA-II catabolism are segregated.  相似文献   

20.
Scavenger receptor BI (SR-BI) is a multi-ligand lipoprotein receptor that mediates selective lipid uptake from HDL, and plays a central role in hepatic HDL metabolism. In this report, we investigated the extent to which SR-BI selective lipid uptake contributes to LDL metabolism. As has been reported for human LDL, mouse SR-BI expressed in transfected cells mediated selective lipid uptake from mouse LDL. However, LDL-cholesteryl oleoyl ester (CE) transfer relative to LDL-CE bound to the cell surface (fractional transfer) was approximately 18-fold lower compared with HDL-CE. Adenoviral vector-mediated SR-BI overexpression in livers of human apoB transgenic mice ( approximately 10-fold increased expression) reduced plasma HDL-cholesterol (HDL-C) and apolipoprotein (apo)A-I concentrations to nearly undetectable levels 3 days after adenovirus infusion. Increased hepatic SR-BI expression resulted in only a modest depletion in LDL-C that was restricted to large LDL particles, and no change in steady-state concentrations of human apoB. Kinetic studies showed a 19% increase in the clearance rate of LDL-CE in mice with increased SR-BI expression, but no change in LDL apolipoprotein clearance. Quantification of hepatic uptake of LDL-CE and LDL-apolipoprotein showed selective uptake of LDL-CE in livers of human apo B transgenic mice. However, such uptake was not significantly increased in mice over-expressing SR-BI. We conclude that SR-BI-mediated selective uptake from LDL plays a minor role in LDL metabolism in vivo.  相似文献   

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