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1.
Bovine adrenocortical cells in monolayer culture produce cortisol and respond to corticotropin (ACTH) by an increase in cortisol secretion. Several lines of evidence are indicative that much of the cholesterol that serves as precursor for steroid hormone biosynthesis by these cells is derived from low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol that is taken up endocytotically by means of specific receptors localized in bovine adrenocortical plasma membranes. ACTH stimulated this process concomitant with an increase in steroid production. In the absence of LDL, ACTH had no effect on steroid biosynthesis. ACTH action in bovine adrenocortical cells resulted in an increase in the number of LDL receptor sites in the membrane fractions, whereas the dissociation constant for LDL binding was not changed. Chloroquine and NH4Cl, considered to be inhibitors of lysosomal degradative activity, caused an increase in the number of [125I]iodoLDL binding sites in the plasma membrane but the effect of ACTH was still apparent in the presence of these agents. These results are suggestive that the lifetime of the LDL receptor is increased when lysosomal activity is inhibited. When aminoglutethimide was added to block cholesterol side-chain cleavage activity and inhibit steroid production, the number of [125I]iodoLDL binding sites in the membrane fractions prepared from bovine adrenocortical cells cultured in the presence of ACTH was reduced to 50% of that in cells maintained in aminoglutethimide-free medium. However, under these conditions the number of binding sites was still significantly greater than in cells maintained in the absence of ACTH. The effects of aminoglutethimide on uptake and degradation of [125I]iodoLDL were similar to the effects on the number of [125I]iodoLDL binding sites. Based on these results, we conclude that the action of ACTH to stimulate LDL metabolism in bovine adrenocortical cells results from an increase in the number of LDL binding sites in the plasma membranes. This action of ACTH appears to be, at least in part, independent of cholesterol utilization for cortisol biosynthesis. However, the effect of aminoglutethimide is indicative that changes in the intracellular cholesterol concentration might modulate the action of ACTH to increase the number of LDL binding sites and therefore to stimulate LDL degradation.  相似文献   

2.
After intravenous injection of 125I-ACTH1-24 into rats, the highest concentration of 125I was found in kidneys, adrenal and liver. Addition of 5- and 30-fold excess unlabelled ACTH reduced the uptake of 125I by 50 and 68%, respectively, indicating that the adrenal uptake was specific. Pretreatment with dexamethasone decreased the adrenal uptake of 125I and caused adrenal atrophy. Chronic ACTH treatment increased the size of the adrenals, but did not affect the adrenal uptake of 125I. These experiments demonstrate selective uptake of 125I by the adrenals after administration of 125I-ACTH1-24.  相似文献   

3.
Receptor-mediated incorporations of two modified low density lipoproteins (LDL), acetylated LDL (acetyl-LDL) and oxidized LDL were compared in vitro in mouse peritoneal macrophages by cross-competition experiments. Excess amount of oxidized LDL inhibits the binding of [125I]acetyl-LDL only partially, and excess amount of acetyl-LDL inhibits that of [125I]oxidized LDL also only partially, suggesting that the uptake of the two LDL by macrophages is mediated by partially overlapped yet different mechanisms. Scatchard analysis of [125I]acetyl-LDL binding showed a linear plot and addition of excess amount of oxidized LDL partially displaced the binding sites without changing the affinity, suggesting that there are two classes of receptors with similar affinity; one is specific for acetyl-LDL and the other is common. And the plot of [125I]oxidized LDL binding showed a curvilinear plot and excess amount of acetyl-LDL partially displaced the binding sites of the low affinity, suggesting that there are two classes of binding sites with different affinities and the low affinity one is shared with acetyl-LDL. These results indicate that macrophage receptors for modified LDL consist of at least three receptors, two of which are specific for each LDL and the rest is a common receptor.  相似文献   

4.
Low-density lipoproteins (LDL) are taken up by LDL receptor (LDLr)-dependent and -independent pathways; the role and importance of the latest being less well defined. We analyzed the importance of these pathways in the mouse by comparing LDL binding to primary cultures of hepatocytes from LDLr knockout (LDLr KO) and normal C57BL/6J mice. Saturation curve analysis shows that (125)I-LDL bind specifically to normal and LDLr KO mouse hepatocytes with similar dissociation constants (K(d)) (31.2 and 22.9 microg LDL-protein/ml, respectively). The maximal binding capacity (B(max)) is, however, reduced by 48% in LDLr KO mouse hepatocytes in comparison to normal hepatocytes. Conducting the assay in the presence of a 200-fold excess of high-density lipoprotein-3 (HDL3) reduced by 39% the binding of (125)I-LDL to normal hepatocytes and abolished the binding to the LDLr KO mouse hepatocytes. These data indicate that in normal mouse hepatocytes, the LDLr is responsible for approximately half of the LDL binding while a lipoprotein binding site (LBS), interacting with both LDL and HDL3, is responsible for the other half. It can also be deduced that both receptors/sites have a similar affinity for LDL. The metabolism of LDL-protein and cholesteryl esters (CE) was analyzed in both types of cells. (125)I-LDL-protein degradation was reduced by 95% in LDLr KO hepatocytes compared to normal hepatocytes. Comparing the association of (125)I-LDL and (3)H-CE-LDL revealed a CE-selective uptake of 35.6- and 22-fold for normal and LDLr KO mouse hepatocytes, respectively. Adding a 200-fold excess of HDL3 in the assay reduced by 71% the CE-selective uptake in LDLr KO hepatocytes and by 96% in normal hepatocytes. This indicates that mouse hepatocytes are able to selectively take up CE from LDL by the LBS. The comparison of LDL-CE association also showed that the LBS pathway provides 5-fold more LDL-CE to the cell than the LDLr. Overall, our results indicate that in mouse hepatocytes, LDLr is almost completely responsible for LDL-protein degradation while the LBS is responsible for the major part of LDL-CE entry by a CE-selective uptake pathway.  相似文献   

5.
Coated vesicles isolated from bovine adrenal cortex contain specific binding sites that recognize 125I-labeled human low density lipoprotein (LDL). These sites share the properties of the functional LDL receptors previously demonstrated on the surface of adrenal cells and in unfractionated adrenal membranes. Approximately 90% of the LDL receptors of the isolated coated vesicles were initially masked. Binding of 125I-LDL increased 10 fold after the vesicles were disrupted with the detergent octylglucoside. The LDL receptors of intact coated vesicles were also shielded from destruction by pronase; proteolytic destruction occurred only after the vesicles had been disrupted with octylglucoside. The adrenal coated vesicles measured 60 nm in diameter, suggesting that they were derived from the Golgi apparatus. Like the previously studied coated vesicles from brain and other tissues, the coated vesicles from adrenal cortex contained clathrin as the major protein component. In contrast to the coated vesicles of adrenal cortex, however, the brain coated vesicles failed to reveal masked LDL receptor activity when treated with octylglucoside. The current data indicate that isolated coated vesicles from the adrenal cortex contain LDL receptors and that these receptors exist in a masked form, apparently because their binding sites face the interior of the vesicle.  相似文献   

6.
Bovine adrenal cells were isolated from the subcapsular region of the gland to obtain cultures enriched in cells of the zona glomerulosa. The cells kept in primary cultures were shown to respond to angiotensin II and adrenocorticorticotropin (ACTH) by a significant increase in aldosterone production. These primary adrenal cultures were used to study the effect of angiotensin II on LDL metabolism. Addition of angiotensin II for 48 h to the culture medium resulted in a 200-300% increase in LDL metabolism, and the lowest effective concentration was 10(-8) -10(-9) M. The angiotensin II effect became evident after 12-16 h of incubation. To compare the metabolism of the 125I-labeled protein moiety to that of cholesteryl ester of LDL, the lipoprotein was labeled also with cholesteryl linoleyl ether, a nonhydrolyzable analog of cholesteryl ester. Under basal conditions and in the presence of angiotensin II or ACTH the ratio of [3H]cholesteryl linoleyl ether to 125I indicate some preferential uptake of the cholesteryl ester moiety. Stimulation of specific LDL binding at 4 degrees C and LDL metabolism at 37 degrees C by 10(-7) M angiotensin II occurred at all concentrations of LDL studied. Linearization of the kinetic data showed that angiotensin II increased the LDL receptor number significantly but not the affinity of the LDL receptor for its ligand. The present findings indicate that in analogy to ACTH, angiotensin II can influence receptor-mediated uptake of LDL by adrenal cortical cells. It remains to be shown whether the angiotensin II effect on LDL metabolism is limited to adrenal cells or will affect other cells which express the angiotensin II receptor.  相似文献   

7.
Low-density lipoprotein (LDL) receptor activity and the concentration of cholesterol were measured in the outer (glomerulosa/fasciculata) and inner (reticularis) zones of the adrenal cortex of the guinea pig to examine the relation between cholesterol content and LDL receptor activity. While the concentration of cholesterol was 2-3-times higher in the outer cortical zone, the maximum high-affinity binding capacity for LDL was essentially the same for the two zones, or slightly higher for the inner zone. Adrenocorticotrophic hormone (ACTH) caused a significant increase in LDL receptor activity only in the outer zone, but led to a reduction in the cholesterol content in both adrenocortical zones. The treatment of animals with 17 alpha-ethinyl-estradiol also resulted in a reduction of cholesterol in both adrenocortical zones, but an increase in LDL receptor number only in the outer zone. The latter effect was partially reversed by the administration of dexamethasone. Aminoglutethimide, which was used in a dose that did not block steroidogenesis but did block the hydrolysis of cholesteryl esters in response to ACTH, did not prevent the ACTH-induced increase in LDL receptor number in the outer zone. Thus, the number of LDL receptors was increased in the zona fasciculata by ACTH in the absence of a reduction in cellular cholesterol content, while the number of LDL receptors in the zona reticularis was not increased by ACTH even in the face of a reduction in cellular cholesterol. Exclusive of the experiments employing aminoglutethimide, when the cellular cholesterol content was plotted against LDL binding activity, an excellent inverse correlation was revealed for the zona fasciculata, but essentially no correlation was noted for the zona reticularis. It is concluded that the outer and inner cortical zones of the guinea pig adrenal are quite distinct in the nature of their LDL receptor activity and regulation: the LDL receptor of the outer zone appears to function in a way similar to what has been reported for the whole adrenal cortex of other species in that receptor number correlates with tissue cholesterol content and is primarily regulated by ACTH; the LDL receptor number of the inner zone, however, does not correlate with tissue cholesterol content and is apparently not regulated by ACTH.  相似文献   

8.
Freshly prepared plasma membranes from rat corpora lutea were examined for the presence of low density lipoprotein (LDL) and high density lipoprotein (HDL) receptors by determining the specific binding of 125I-LDL and 125I-HDL. These membranes have two types of binding site for 125I-LDL, one with high affinity (Kd = 7.7 micrograms of LDL protein/ml), the other with low affinity (Kd = 213 micrograms of LDL protein/ml) and one type of binding site for 125I-HDL with Kd = 17.8 micrograms of HDL protein/ml. LDL receptor is sensitive to pronase and trypsin; HDL receptor, however, is resistant. The binding reaction was further characterized with respect to effect of time and temperature of incubation, requirement of divalent metal ion, influence of ionic strength, and binding specificity. In vivo pretreatment of rats with human choriogonadotropin (hCG) resulted in induction of both LDL and HDL receptors in a dose- and time-dependent manner when compared with saline-injected controls. The induction of lipoprotein receptors by hCG treatment is target organ-specific since the increase was seen only in the ovarian tissue. Membranes prepared from liver, kidney, and heart did not show an increase in lipoprotein receptors after hCG injection. An examination of the equilibrium dissociation constants for 125I-LDL and 125I-HDL binding after hCG administration revealed that the increase in binding activity was due to an increase in the number of binding sites rather than to a change in the binding affinity. In conclusion, rat corpus luteum possesses specific receptors for both LDL and HDL and these receptors are regulated by gonadotropins.  相似文献   

9.
Addition of rat or human high density lipoproteins (HDL) or human low density lipoproteins (LDL) to rat adrenocortical cells in vitro was found to enhance steroid production and increase cell cholesterol content. These effects of HDL were not observed in cultured mouse Y-1 adrenal cells, suggesting that rat adrenal cells possess a specific mechanism for uptake of HDL cholesterol not found in Y-1 cells. The effects of HDL were most marked on cells previously stimulated with adrenocorticotropin (ACTH) and depleted of their endogenous cholesterol stores. Such cells were prepared either by treatment in vivo with 4-aminopyrazolopyrimidine or in vitro with ACTH (10(-7) M) in lipoprotein-poor media. Steroid production by treated cells exhibited a saturable dependence on media HDL concentration. In addition to enhancing ACTH stimulated steroid production, addition of HDL also resulted in a saturable concentration-dependent increase in cell cholesterol content. Both aminoglutethimide and cycloheximide were found to inhibit HDL-enhanced steroid production. Finally, addition of HDL to short term incubations (5 1/2 h) of ACTH-treated cells caused no change in the rate of incorporation of 14C-acetate into cholesterol or corticosterone. These results indicate that rat adrenocortical cells possess a specific, saturable, ACTH-dependent mechanism for uptake of HDL cholesterol. Moreover, cellular uptake of HDL cholesterol exceeded by at least 4-fold the amount of cholesterol associated with HDL apoprotein degraded by the cells, suggesting that utilization of HDL cholesterol does not require endocytosis and lysosomal degradation of the entire HDL particle.  相似文献   

10.
The cellular mechanisms responsible for the lipoprotein-mediated stimulation of bile acid synthesis in cultured rat hepatocytes were investigated. Adding 280 micrograms/ml of cholesterol in the form of human or rat low density lipoprotein (LDL) to the culture medium increased bile acid synthesis by 1.8- and 1.6-fold, respectively. As a result of the uptake of LDL, the synthesis of [14C]cholesterol from [2-14C]acetate was decreased and cellular cholesteryl ester mass was increased. Further studies demonstrated that rat apoE-free LDL and apoE-rich high density lipoprotein (HDL) both stimulated bile acid synthesis 1.5-fold, as well as inhibited the formation of [14C]cholesterol from [2-14C]acetate. Reductive methylation of LDL blocked the inhibition of cholesterol synthesis, as well as the stimulation of bile acid synthesis, suggesting that these processes require receptor-mediated uptake. To identify the receptors responsible, competitive binding studies using 125I-labeled apoE-free LDL and 125I-labeled apoE-rich HDL were performed. Both apoE-free LDL and apoE-rich HDL displayed an equal ability to compete for binding of the other, suggesting that a receptor or a group of receptors that recognizes both apolipoproteins is involved. Additional studies show that hepatocytes from cholestyramine-treated rats displayed 2.2- and 3.4-fold increases in the binding of apoE-free LDL and apoE-rich HDL, respectively. These data show for the first time that receptor-mediated uptake of LDL by the liver is intimately linked to processes activating bile acid synthesis.  相似文献   

11.
Scavenger receptor BI (SR-BI) mediates selective uptake of high density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesteryl ester in the liver and adrenal gland. Adrenal SR-BI is increased both in adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH)-treated mice and also in apolipoprotein A-I knock-out (apoA-I0) mice which have depleted adrenal cholesterol stores. The goal of the present study was to determine whether adrenal cholesterol stores and ACTH have independent effects on SR-BI expression in adrenal gland. Adrenal SR-BI levels were 5-fold higher in apoA-I0 than wild-type mice when killed under low stress condition, and plasma ACTH levels were similar in both strains. After male apoA-I0 or wild-type mice were treated with dexamethasone to suppress ACTH release, adrenal SR-BI protein levels were decreased in both groups but remained 13-fold higher in apoA-I0 than in wild-type mice. By contrast, uncontrolled stress or supplemental ACTH treatment increased SR-BI levels but narrowed the difference in SR-BI expression between apoA-I0 and wild-type. Cholesterol depletion by beta-cyclodextrin in cultured Y1-BS1 adrenal cells also led to a rapid 2- to 3-fold increase in SR-BI mRNA and protein levels, in association with a significant depletion of cellular free cholesterol.These results indicate that depletion of adrenal cholesterol stores can act independently from ACTH to increase SR-BI expression, but in vivo this effect is diminished under high ACTH conditions. Both stimuli may increase selective uptake via increased SR-BI as a means of replenishing cholesterol stores for steroid hormone synthesis.  相似文献   

12.
Plasma membranes prepared from clonal NB-15 mouse neuroblastoma cells were sequentially incubated with 125I-labeled insulin (10 nM) and the bifunctional cross-linking agent disuccinimidyl suberate. This treatment resulted in the cross-linking of 125I-labeled insulin to a polypeptide that gave an apparent Mr of 135 000 on a sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresed in the presence of 10% beta-mercaptoethanol. Affinity labeling of this polypeptide was inhibited by the presence of 5 microM unlabeled insulin, but not by 1 microM unlabeled nerve growth factor. Using the same affinity labeling technique, 125I-labeled nerve growth factor (1 nM) did not label any polypeptide appreciably in the plasma membranes of NB-15 cells but labeled an Mr 145 000 and an Mr 115 000 species in PC-12 rat pheochromocytoma cells. The number of insulin binding sites per cell in the intact differentiated NB-15 mouse neuroblastoma cells was approx. 6-fold greater than that in the undifferentiated NB-15 mouse neuroblastoma cells as measured by specific binding assay, suggesting an increase of the number of insulin receptors in NB-15 mouse neuroblastoma cells during differentiation.  相似文献   

13.
The rat hepatoma cell line Fu5AH has the unusual property of accumulating massive amounts of cholesteryl ester upon incubation with hypercholesterolemic serum, and especially when incubated with beta-very low density lipoproteins (beta-VLDL) from cholesterol-fed dogs. The present study was designed to identify and characterize the lipoprotein receptors that mediate the cholesteryl ester accumulation. The beta-VLDL and cholesterol-induced apolipoprotein (apo) E-containing high density lipoproteins (apoE HDLc) bound to Fu5AH cells with very high affinity (Kd approximately equal to 10(-10) M), whereas low density lipoproteins (LDL) bound with unusually low affinity (Kd approximately equal to 10(-8) M). Receptor binding activity of 125I-labeled beta-VLDL, 125I-labeled apoE HDLc, and 125I-labeled LDL was abolished by incubation in the presence of an excess of unlabeled LDL or of a polyclonal antibody to the bovine adrenal apoB,E(LDL) receptor. The receptors were completely down-regulated by preincubating Fu5AH cells with beta-VLDL, but much higher levels of beta-VLDL were required than for down-regulation of fibroblast apoB,E(LDL) receptors. Receptor binding was abolished by reductive methylation of the lysyl residues of the apolipoprotein of the beta-VLDL and by an apoE monoclonal antibody (1D7) that blocks receptor binding. The Fu5AH receptor was further characterized by using the bovine adrenal apoB,E(LDL) receptor antibody. A single protein (Mr approximately equal to 130,000) was identified in Triton extracts of whole cells, and two proteins (Mr approximately equal to 130,000 and 115,000) were found in Fu5AH cell membranes disrupted by homogenization. The Mr approximately equal to 115,000 protein was released from the membranes and did not react with an antibody to the carboxyl-terminal (cytoplasmic) domain of the apoB,E(LDL) receptors. These studies indicate that Fu5AH cells express apoB,E(LDL) receptors that have unusually low affinity for apoB-continuing lipoproteins, require large amounts of cholesterol to induce down-regulation, and are susceptible to specific proteolysis in cell homogenates. These apoB,E(LDL) receptors are responsible for the receptor-mediated uptake of beta-VLDL and chylomicron remnants by Fu5AH cells.  相似文献   

14.
Serum lipoproteins control cell cholesterol content by regulating its uptake, biosynthesis, and excretion. Monolayers of cultured fibroblasts were used to study interactions with human high density (HDL) and low density (LDL) lipoproteins doubly labeled with [(3)H]cholesterol and (125)I in the apoprotein moiety. In the binding assay for LDL, the absence of specific LDL receptors in type II hypercholesterolemic fibroblasts was confirmed, whereas monolayers of virus-transformed human lung fibroblasts (VA-4) exhibited LDL binding characteristics essentially the same as normal lung fibroblasts. In the studies of HDL binding, specific HDL binding sites were demonstrated in normal and virus-transformed fibroblasts. In addition, type II hypercholesterolemic cells, despite the loss of LDL receptors, retained normal HDL binding sites. No significant competition was displayed between the two lipoprotein classes for their respective binding sites over a 5-fold concentration range. In VA-4 cells, the amount of lipoprotein required to saturate half the receptor sites was 3.5 micro g/ml (9 x 10(-9) M) for LDL and 9.1 micro g/ml (9 x 10(-8) M) for HDL. Pronase treatment reduced LDL binding by more than half but had no effect on HDL binding. Chloroquine, a lysomal enzyme inhibitor, stimulated net LDL uptake 3.5-fold by increasing internalized LDL but had essentially no effect on HDL uptake. Further experiments were conducted using doubly labeled lipoproteins to characterize the interaction of LDL and HDL with cells. While the cholesterol and protein moieties of LDL were incorporated into cells at similar rates, the uptake of the cholesterol moiety of HDL was 5 to 10 times more rapid than that of the protein component. Furthermore, the apoprotein component of LDL is extensively degraded following exposure, whereas the apoprotein moiety of HDL retains its macromolecular chromatographic characteristics. These results indicate that HDL and LDL bind to cultured cells at separate sites and that further processing of the two lipoprotein classes appears to take place by fundamentally different mechanisms.-Wu, J-D., J. Butler, and J. M. Bailey. Lipid metabolism in cultured cells XVIII. Comparative uptake of low density and high density lipoproteins by normal, hypercholesterolemic, and tumor virus-transformed human fibroblasts.  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
Specific receptors for corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF) were identified in the rat anterior pituitary gland by binding studies with 125I-Tyr-CRF. Binding of the labeled CRF analog to pituitary particles was rapid and temperature-dependent, and reached steady state within 45 min at 22 degrees C. The CRF binding sites were saturable and of high affinity, with dissociation constant (Kd) of 0.76 X 10(-9) M. Pituitary binding of 125I-Tyr-CRF was inhibited by CRF, Tyr-CRF and the active 15-41 fragment of CRF, but not by the inactive 21-41 CRF fragment and unrelated peptides. The binding-inhibition potencies of the CRF peptides were similar to their activities as stimuli of adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) release. The high-affinity CRF sites were markedly reduced in adrenalectomized rats, and this change was reversed by dexamethasone treatment. These data indicate that the high-affinity CRF sites demonstrated in the anterior pituitary are the functional receptors which mediate the stimulatory action of the peptide on ACTH release, and that CRF receptors are down-regulated during increased secretion of the hypothalamic hormone.  相似文献   

17.
The number of ACTH binding sites, in adrenal membranes from adult female rabbits, has been measured at different times after hypophysectomy and after ACTH1–24 treatment. The receptor number was significantly reduced 192 h after removal of the pituitary gland as compared to intact controls. Conversely, ACTH treatment of intact rabbits enhanced the number of ACTH binding sites, or restored these levels to presurgical values in hypophysectomized animals. These results suggest that ACTH, like other hormones, is able to induce an increase in the number of its own receptors; the physiological significance of such variations remains however to be elucidated.  相似文献   

18.
The receptor on mouse peritoneal macrophages that mediates the uptake of canine beta-very low density lipoproteins (beta-VLDL) has been identified in this study as an unusual apolipoprotein (apo-) B,E(LDL) receptor. Ligand blots of Triton X-100 extracts of mouse peritoneal macrophages using 125I-beta-VLDL identified a single protein. This protein cross-reacted with antibodies against bovine apo-B,E(LDL) receptors, but its apparent Mr was approximately 5,000 less than that of the human apo-B,E(LDL) receptor. Binding studies at 4 degrees C demonstrated specific and saturable binding of low density lipoproteins (LDL), beta-VLDL, and cholesterol-induced high density lipoproteins in plasma that contain apo-E as their only protein constituent (apo-E HDLc) to mouse macrophages. Apolipoprotein E-containing lipoproteins (beta-VLDL and apo-E HDLc) bound to mouse macrophages and human fibroblasts with the same high affinity. However, LDL bound to mouse macrophages with an 18-fold lower affinity than to human fibroblasts. Mouse fibroblasts also bound LDL with a similar low affinity. Compared with the apo-B,E(LDL) receptors on human fibroblasts, the apo-B,E(LDL) receptors on mouse macrophages were resistant to down-regulation by incubation of the cells with LDL or beta-VLDL. There are three lines of evidence that an unusual apo-B,E(LDL) receptor on mouse peritoneal macrophages mediates the binding and uptake of beta-VLDL: LDL with residual apo-E removed displaced completely the 125I-beta-VLDL binding to mouse macrophages, preincubation of the mouse macrophages with apo-B,E(LDL) receptor antibody inhibited both the binding of beta-VLDL and LDL to the cells and the formation of beta-VLDL- and LDL-induced cholesteryl esters, and binding of 125I-beta-VLDL to the cells after down-regulation correlated directly with the amount of mouse macrophage apo-B,E(LDL) receptor as determined on immunoblots. This unusual receptor binds LDL poorly, but binds apo-E-containing lipoproteins with normal very high affinity and is resistant to down-regulation by extracellular cholesterol.  相似文献   

19.
We demonstrate here that hepatic triglyceride lipase (HTGL) enhances VLDL degradation in cultured cells by a LDL receptor-mediated mechanism. VLDL binding at 4 degrees C and degradation at 37 degrees C by normal fibroblasts was stimulated by HTGL in a dose-dependent manner. A maximum increase of up to 7-fold was seen at 10 microg/ml HTGL. Both VLDL binding and degradation were significantly increased (4-fold) when LDL receptors were up-regulated by treatment with lovastatin. HTGL also stimulated VLDL degradation by LDL receptor-deficient FH fibroblasts but the level of maximal degradation was 40-fold lower than in lovastatin-treated normal fibroblasts. A prominent role for LDL receptors was confirmed by demonstration of similar HTGL-promoted VLDL degradation by normal and LRP-deficient murine embryonic fibroblasts. HTGL enhanced binding and internalization of apoprotein-free triglyceride emulsions, however, this was LDL receptor-independent. HTGL-stimulated binding and internalization of apoprotein-free emulsions was totally abolished by heparinase indicating that it was mediated by HSPG. In a cell-free assay HTGL competitively inhibited the binding of VLDL to immobilized LDL receptors at 4 degrees C suggesting that it may directly bind to LDL receptors but may not bind VLDL particles at the same time.We conclude that the ability of HTGL to enhance VLDL degradation is due to its ability to concentrate lipoprotein particles on HSPG sites on the cell surface leading to LDL receptor-mediated endocytosis and degradation.  相似文献   

20.
Apolipoprotein E (apoE) plays a major role in lipoprotein metabolism by mediating the binding of apoE-containing lipoproteins to receptors. The role of hepatic apoE in the catabolism of apoE-free lipoproteins such as low density lipoprotein (LDL) and high density lipoprotein-3 (HDL(3)) is however, unclear. We analyzed the importance of hepatic apoE by comparing human LDL and HDL(3) metabolism in primary cultures of hepatic cells from control C57BL/6J and apoE knockout (KO) mice. Binding analysis showed that the maximal binding capacity (Bmax) of LDL, but not of HDL(3), is increased by twofold in the absence of apoE synthesis/secretion. Compared to control hepatic cells, LDL and HDL(3) holoparticle uptake by apoE KO hepatic cells, as monitored by protein degradation, is reduced by 54 and 77%, respectively. Cleavage of heparan sulfate proteoglycans (HSPG) by treatment with heparinase I reduces LDL association by 21% in control hepatic cells. Thus, HSPG alone or a hepatic apoE-HSPG complex is partially involved in LDL association with mouse hepatic cells. In apoE KO, but not in normal hepatic cells, the same treatment increases LDL uptake/degradation by 2.4-fold suggesting that in normal hepatic cells, hepatic apoE increases LDL degradation by masking apoB-100 binding sites on proteoglycans. Cholesteryl ester (CE) association and CE selective uptake (CE/protein association ratio) from LDL and HDL(3) by mouse hepatic cells were not affected by the absence of apoE expression. We also show that 69 and 72% of LDL-CE hydrolysis in control and apoE KO hepatic cells, respectively, is sensitive to chloroquine revealing the importance of a pathway linked to lysosomes. In contrast, HDL(3)-CE hydrolysis is only mediated by a nonlysosomal pathway in both control and apoE KO hepatic cells. Overall, our results indicate that hepatic apoE increases the holoparticle uptake pathway of LDL and HDL(3) by mouse hepatic cells, that HSPG devoid of apoE favors LDL binding/association but impairs LDL uptake/degradation and that apoE plays no significant role in CE selective uptake from either human LDL or HDL(3) lipoproteins.  相似文献   

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