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1.
Although the most exogenous lipids enter the cell via the LDL-receptor pathway, the mechanism(s) whereby lipids leave the lysosome for transport to intracellular sites are not clearly resolved. As shown herein, expression of sterol carrier protein-2 (SCP-2) in transfected L-cells altered lysosomal membrane lipid distribution, dynamics, and response to lipid transfer proteins. SCP-2 expression decreased the mass of cholesterol and lyso-bis-phosphatidic acid [LBPA], as well as the ratios of cholesterol/phospholipid and polyunsaturated/monounsaturated fatty acids esterified to lysosomal membrane phospholipids. Concomitantly, a fluorescent sterol transfer assay showed that SCP-2 expression decreased the initial rates of spontaneous and SCP-2-mediated sterol transfer 5.5- and 3.8-fold, respectively, from lysosomal membranes isolated from SCP-2 expressing cells as compared to controls. SCP-2, sphingomyelinase, low density lipoprotein, and high density lipoprotein directly enhanced the initial rates of sterol transfer from isolated lysosomal membranes by 50-, 12-, 4-, and 5-fold, respectively. In contrast, albumin and cholesterol esterase had no effect on lysosomal sterol transfer. Spontaneous sterol was very slow, t(1/2)>4 days, regardless of the source of the lysosomal membrane, while SCP-2 added in vitro induced formation of rapid and slowly transferable sterol pools in lysosomal membranes of control cells. In contrast, SCP-2 did not induce formation of a rapidly transferable sterol domain in lysosomal membranes isolated from SCP-2 expressing cells. These data suggest that SCP-2 expression selectively shifted the distribution of lipids (cholesterol, LBPA, esterified polyunsaturated fatty acids) away from lysosomal membranes. Furthermore, the cholesterol depleted lysosomal membrane isolated from SCP-2 expressing cells was resistant to additional direct action of SCP-2 to further enhance sterol transfer and induce rapidly transferable sterol pools in the lysosomal membrane.  相似文献   

2.
Although sterol carrier protein-2 (SCP-2) binds, transfers, and/or enhances the metabolism of many membrane lipid species (fatty acids, cholesterol, phospholipids), it is not known if SCP-2 expression actually alters the membrane distribution of lipids in living cells or tissues. As shown herein for the first time, expression of SCP-2 in transfected L-cell fibroblasts reduced the plasma membrane levels of lipid species known to traffic through the HDL-receptor-mediated efflux pathway: cholesterol, cholesteryl esters, and phospholipids. While the ratio of cholesterol/phospholipid in plasma membranes of intact cells was not changed by SCP-2 expression, phosphatidylinositol, a molecule important to intracellular signaling and vesicular trafficking, and anionic phospholipids were selectively retained. Only modest alterations in plasma membrane phospholipid percent fatty acid composition but no overall change in the proportion of saturated, unsaturated, monounsaturated, or polyunsaturated fatty acids were observed. The reduced plasma membrane content of cholesterol was not due to SCP-2 inhibition of sterol transfer from the lysosomes to the plasma membranes. SCP-2 dramatically enhanced sterol transfer from isolated lysosomal membranes to plasma membranes by eliciting detectable sterol transfer within 30 s, decreasing the t(1/2) for sterol transfer 364-fold from >4 days to 7-15 min, and inducing formation of rapidly transferable sterol domains. In summary, data obtained with intact transfected cells and in vitro sterol transfer assays showed that SCP-2 expression (i) selectively modulated plasma membrane lipid composition and (ii) decreased the plasma membrane content cholesterol, an effect potentially due to more rapid SCP-2-mediated cholesterol transfer from versus to the plasma membrane.  相似文献   

3.
Although the majority of exogenous cholesterol and cholesterol ester enters the cell by LDL-receptor-mediated endocytosis and the lysosomal pathway, the assumption that cholesterol transfers out of the lysosome by rapid (minutes), spontaneous diffusion has heretofore not been tested. As shown herein, lysosomal membranes were unique among known organellar membranes in terms of cholesterol content, cholesterol dynamics, and response to cholesterol-mobilizing proteins. First, the lysosomal membrane cholesterol:phospholipid molar ratio, 0.38, was intermediate between those of the plasma membrane and other organellar membranes. Second, a fluorescence sterol exchange assay showed that the initial rate of spontaneous sterol transfer out of lysosomes and purified lysosomal membranes was extremely slow, t(1/2) >4 days. This was >100-fold longer than that reported in intact cells (2 min) and 40-60-fold longer than from any other known intracellular membrane. Third, when probed with several cholesterol-binding proteins, the initial rate of sterol transfer was maximally increased nearly 80-fold and the organization of cholesterol in the lysosomal membrane was rapidly altered. Nearly half of the essentially nonexchangeable sterol in the lysosomal membrane was converted to rapidly (t(1/2) = 6 min; fraction = 0.06) and slowly (t(1/2) = 154 min; fraction = 0.36) exchangeable sterol domains/pools. In summary, the data revealed that spontaneous cholesterol transfer out of the lysosome and lysosomal membrane was extremely slow, inconsistent with rapid spontaneous diffusion across the lysosomal membrane. In contrast, the very slow spontaneous transfer of sterol out of the lysosome and lysosomal membrane was consistent with cholesterol leaving the lysosome earlier in the endocytic process and/or with cholesterol transfer out of the lysosome being mediated by additional process(es) extrinsic to the lysosome and lysosomal membrane.  相似文献   

4.
Although the 20-amino acid presequence present in 15-kDa pro-sterol carrier protein-2 (pro-SCP-2, the precursor of the mature 13-kDa SCP-2) alters the function of SCP-2 in lipid metabolism, the molecular basis for this effect is unresolved. The presequence dramatically altered SCP-2 structure as determined by circular dichroism, mass spectroscopy, and antibody accessibility such that pro-SCP-2 had 3-fold less alpha-helix, 7-fold more beta-structure, 6-fold more reactive C terminus to carboxypeptidase A, 2-fold less binding of anti-SCP-2, and did not enhance sterol transfer from plasma membranes. These differences were not due to protein stability since (i) the same concentration of guanidine hydrochloride was required for 50% unfolding, and (ii) the ligand binding sites displayed the same high affinity (nanomolar K(d) values) in the order: cholesterol straight chain fatty acid > kinked chain fatty acid. Laser scanning confocal microscopy and double immunofluorescence demonstrated that pro-SCP-2 was more efficiently targeted to peroxisomes. Transfection of l-cells or McAR7777 hepatoma cells with cDNA encoding pro-SCP-2 resulted in 45% and 59% of SCP-2, respectively, colocalizing with the peroxisomal marker PMP70. In contrast, l-cells transfected with cDNA encoding SCP-2 exhibited 3-fold lower colocalization of SCP-2 with PMP70. In summary, the data suggest for the first time that the 20-amino acid presequence of pro-SCP-2 alters SCP-2 structure to facilitate peroxisomal targeting mediated by the C-terminal SKL peroxisomal targeting sequence.  相似文献   

5.
The steroidogenic acute regulatory protein (StAR) mediates the rate-limiting step of steroidogenesis, delivery of cholesterol to the inner mitochondrial membrane. However, the mechanism whereby cholesterol translocation is accomplished has not been resolved. Recombinant StAR proteins lacking the first N-terminal 62 amino acids comprising the mitochondrial-targeting sequence were used to determine if StAR binds cholesterol and alters mitochondrial membrane cholesterol domains to enhance sterol transfer. First, a fluorescent NBD-cholesterol binding assay revealed 2 sterol binding sites (K(d) values near 32 nm), whereas the inactive A218V N-62 StAR mutant had only a single binding site with 8-fold lower affinity. Second, NBD-cholesterol spectral shifts and fluorescence resonance energy transfer from StAR Trp residues to NBD-cholesterol showed (i) close molecular interaction between these molecules (R(2/3) = 33 A) and (ii) sensitized NBD-cholesterol emission from only one of the two sterol binding sites. Third, circular dichroism showed that cholesterol binding induced a change in StAR secondary structure. Fourth, a fluorescent sterol transfer assay that did not require separation of donor and acceptor mitochondrial membranes demonstrated that StAR enhanced mitochondrial sterol transfer as much as 100-fold and induced/increased the formation of rapidly transferable cholesterol domains in isolated mitochondrial membranes. StAR was 67-fold more effective in transferring cholesterol from mitochondria of steroidogenic MA-10 cells than from human fibroblast mitochondria. In contrast, sterol carrier protein-2 (SCP-2) was only 2.2-fold more effective in mediating sterol transfer from steroidogenic cell mitochondria. Taken together these data showed that StAR is a cholesterol-binding protein, preferentially enhances sterol transfer from steroidogenic cell mitochondria, and interacts with mitochondrial membranes to alter their sterol domain structure and dynamics.  相似文献   

6.
Although sterol carrier protein 2 (SCP-2) has long been regarded primarily as a sterol transfer protein, its actual physiological function is not known. The recent discovery that SCP-2 binds long chain fatty acyl-CoAs (LCFA-CoAs) with high affinity suggests additional roles for SCP-2 in cellular utilization of LCFA-CoAs for synthesis of glycerides and cholesterol esters. Concomitant to these anabolic pathways, LCFA-CoAs are also degraded by cellular hydrolases. The purpose of the work presented herein was to determine if SCP-2 altered the aqueous pool of LCFA-CoA by (i) extracting LCFA-CoA from microsomal membranes, and (ii) protecting LCFA-CoA from microsomal hydrolase activity. The data demonstrated for the first time that SCP-2 increases the aqueous pool of oleoyl-CoA by increasing the aqueous/membrane distribution oleoyl-CoA by 2.4-fold. In addition, SCP-2 inhibited the hydrolysis of oleoyl-CoA by microsomal acyl-CoA hydrolase 1.6-2.4 fold, depending on the concentration of oleoyl-CoA. By simultaneously extracting LCFA-CoA from membranes and inhibiting LCFA-CoA degradation SCP-2 may potentiate LCFA-CoA transacylation and modulate the role of LCFA-CoAs as intracellular signaling molecules.  相似文献   

7.
The fluorescent sterol delta 5,7,9(11)-dehydroergostatetraen-3 beta-ol (dehydroergosterol) was used as an analogue of cholesterol to examine the molecular interaction of purified rat liver sterol carrier protein-2 (SCP-2) with sterol. The binding of dehydroergosterol to SCP-2 was evidenced by light scatter and by fluorescence polarization, lifetime, limiting anisotropy, and rotational relaxation time of dehydroergosterol. In addition, energy transfer efficiency from SCP-2 tryptophan to dehydroergosterol was 96%, indicating that the apparent distance, R, between the SCP-2 tryptophan (energy donor) and the dehydroergosterol (energy acceptor) was 13.7 A. Scatchard binding analysis of light scatter, lifetime, and energy transfer data all indicated a 1:1 molar stoichiometry with Kd = 1.2, 1.6, and 1.3 microM, respectively. SCP-2 enhanced the activity of microsomal acyl-CoA:cholesterol acyltransferase through transfer of [3H]cholesterol from donor palmitoyloleoyl phosphatidylcholine/cholesterol small unilamellar vesicles to rat liver microsomes containing the enzyme. A recently developed fluorescence assay utilizing dehydroergosterol fluorescence polarization (Nemecz, G., Fontaine, R. N., and Schroeder, F. (1988) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 948, 511-521; Nemecz, G., and Schroeder, F. (1988) Biochemistry 27, 7740-7749) was applied to examine the effect of SCP-2 on sterol exchange. In the absence of SCP-2, two spontaneously exchangeable sterol domains were observed in palmitoyloleoyl phosphatidylcholine/sterol (65:35 molar ratio) small unilamellar vesicles. SCP-2 enhanced the rate of exchange of the faster exchanging domain 2-fold. The transfer rate of the more slowly exchangeable sterol domain and the fraction of cholesterol represented by each domain were not affected. These results demonstrate the utility of dehydroergosterol to probe SCP-2 interactions with sterols and are indicative of a physiological role for SCP-2 as a soluble sterol carrier.  相似文献   

8.
Although the functional significance of caveolae/lipid rafts in cellular signaling and cholesterol transfer is increasingly recognized, almost nothing is known regarding the lipids, cholesterol dynamics, and factors regulating these properties in caveolae/lipid rafts as opposed to nonlipid raft domains of the plasma membrane. The present findings demonstrate the utility of con-A affinity chromatography for simultaneous isolation of caveolae/lipid raft and nonlipid raft domains from plasma membranes of L-cell fibroblasts. These domains differed markedly in both protein and lipid constituents. Although caveolae/lipid rafts were enriched in total lipid, cholesterol, and phospholipid as well as other markers for these domains, the cholesterol/phospholipid ratio of caveolae/lipid rafts did not differ from that of nonlipid rafts. Nevertheless, spontaneous sterol transfer was 7-12-fold faster from caveolae/lipid raft than nonlipid raft domains of the plasma membrane. This was largely due to the near absence of exchangeable sterol in the nonlipid rafts. SCP-2 dramatically and selectively enhanced sterol transfer from caveolae/lipid rafts, but not from nonlipid rafts. Finally, overexpression of SCP-2 significantly altered the sterol dynamics of caveolae/lipid rafts to facilitate retention of cholesterol within the cell. These results established for the first time that (i) caveolae/lipid rafts, rather than the nonlipid raft domains, contain significant levels of rapidly transferable sterol, consistent with their role in spontaneous sterol transfer from and through the plasma membrane, and (ii) SCP-2 selectively regulates how caveolae/lipid rafts, but not nonlipid raft domains, mediate cholesterol trafficking through the plasma membrane.  相似文献   

9.
Although sterol carrier protein-2 (SCP-2) participates in the uptake and intracellular trafficking of cholesterol, its effect on "reverse cholesterol transport" has not been explored. As shown herein, SCP-2 expression inhibited high density lipoprotein (HDL)-mediated efflux of [(3)H]cholesterol and fluorescent 22-(N-(7-nitrobenz-2-oxa-1, 3-diazol-4-yl)amino)-23,24-bisnor-5-cholen-3b-ol (NBD-cholesterol) up to 61 and 157%, respectively. Confocal microscopy of living cells allowed kinetic analysis of two intracellular pools of HDL-mediated NBD-cholesterol efflux: the highly fluorescent lipid droplet pool and the less fluorescent pool outside the lipid droplets, designated the cytoplasmic compartment. Both the whole cell and the cytoplasmic compartment exhibited two similar kinetic pools, the half-times of which were consistent with protein (t(b)(12) near 1 min) and vesicular (t(d)(12) = 10-20 min) mediated sterol transfer. Although SCP-2 expression did not alter cytoplasmic sterol pool sizes, the rapid t(b)(12) decreased 36%, while the slower t(d)(12) increased 113%. Lipid droplets also exhibited two kinetic pools of NBD-cholesterol efflux but with half-times over 200% shorter than those of the cytoplasmic compartment. The lipid droplet slower effluxing pool size and t(d)(12) were increased 48% and 115%, respectively, in SCP-2-expressing cells. Concomitantly, the level of the lipid droplet-specific adipose differentiation-related protein decreased 70%. Overall, HDL-mediated sterol efflux from L-cell fibroblasts reflected that of the cytoplasmic rather than lipid droplet compartment. SCP-2 differentially modulated sterol efflux from the two cytoplasmic pools. However, net efflux was determined primarily by inhibition of the slowly effluxing pool rather than by acceleration of the rapid protein-mediated pool. Finally, SCP-2 expression also inhibited sterol efflux from lipid droplets, an effect related to decreased adipose differentiation-related protein, a lipid droplet surface protein that binds cholesterol with high affinity.  相似文献   

10.
Although sterol carrier protein-2 (SCP-2) is encoded as a precursor protein (proSCP-2), little is known regarding the structure and function of the 20-amino acid N-terminal presequence. As shown herein, the presequence contains significant secondary structure and alters SCP-2: (i) secondary structure (CD), (ii) tertiary structure (aqueous exposure of Trp shown by UV absorbance, fluorescence, and fluorescence quenching), (iii) ligand binding site [Trp response to ligands, peptide cross-linked by photoactivatable free cholesterol (FCBP)], (iv) selectivity for interaction with anionic phospholipid-rich membranes, (v) interaction with a peroxisomal import protein [FRET studies of Pex5p(C) binding], the N-terminal presequence increased SCP-2's affinity for Pex5p(C) by 10-fold, and (vi) intracellular targeting in living and fixed cells (confocal microscopy). Nearly 5-fold more SCP-2 than proSCP-2 colocalized with plasma membrane lipid rafts and caveolae (AF488-CTB); 2.8-fold more SCP-2 than proSCP-2 colocalized with a mitochondrial marker (Mitotracker), but nearly 2-fold less SCP-2 than proSCP-2 colocalized with peroxisomes (AF488 antibody to PMP70). These data indicate the importance of the N-terminal presequence in regulating SCP-2 structure, cholesterol localization within the ligand binding site, membrane association, and, potentially, intracellular targeting.  相似文献   

11.
Over 20 years ago, it was reported that liver cytosol contains at least two distinct proteins that transfer phosphatidylinositol in vitro, phosphatidylinositol transfer protein (PITP) and a pH 5.1 supernatant fraction containing sterol carrier protein-2 (SCP-2). In contrast to PITP, there has been minimal progress on the structural and functional significance of SCP-2 in phosphatidylinositol transport. As shown herein, highly purified, recombinant SCP-2 stimulated up to 13-fold the rapid (s) transfer of radiolabeled phosphatidylinositol (PI) from microsomal donor membranes to highly curved acceptor membranes. SCP-2 bound to microsomes in vitro and overexpression of SCP-2 in transfected L-cells resulted in the following: (i) redistribution of phosphatidylinositols from intracellular membranes (mitochondria and microsomes) to the plasma membrane; (ii) enhancement of insulin-mediated inositol-triphosphate production; and (iii) 5.5-fold down regulation of PITP. Like PITP, SCP-2 binds two ligands required for vesicle budding from the Golgi, PI, and fatty acyl CoA. Double immunolabeling confocal microscopy showed SCP-2 significantly colocalized with caveolin-1 in the cytoplasm (punctate) and plasma membrane of SCP-2 overexpressing hepatoma cells (72%), HT-29 cells (58%), and SCP-2 overexpressing L-cells (37%). Taken together, these data show for the first time that SCP-2 plays a hitherto unrecognized role in intracellular phosphatidylinositol transfer, distribution, and signaling.  相似文献   

12.
HDL-mediated reverse-cholesterol transport as well as phosphoinositide signaling are mediated through plasma membrane microdomains termed caveolae/lipid rafts. However, relatively little is known regarding mechanism(s) whereby these lipids traffic to or are targeted to caveolae/lipid rafts. Since sterol carrier protein-2 (SCP-2) binds both cholesterol and phosphatidylinositol, the possibility that SCP-2 might interact with caveolin-1 and caveolae was examined. Double immunolabeling and laser scanning fluorescence microscopy showed that a small but significant portion of SCP-2 colocalized with caveolin-1 primarily at the plasma membrane of L-cells and more so within intracellular punctuate structures in hepatoma cells. In SCP-2 overexpressing L-cells, SCP-2 was detected in close proximity to caveolin, 48 +/- 4 A, as determined by fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) and immunogold electron microscopy. Cell fractionation of SCP-2 overexpressing L-cells and Western blotting detected SCP-2 in purified plasma membranes, especially in caveolae/ lipid rafts as compared to the nonraft fraction. SCP-2 and caveolin-1 were coimmunoprecipitated from cell lysates by anti-caveolin-1 and anti-SCP-2. Finally, a yeast two-hybrid assay demonstrated that SCP-2 directly interacts with caveolin-1 in vivo. These interactions of SCP-2 with caveolin-1 were specific since a functionally related protein, phosphatidyinositol transfer protein (PITP), colocalized much less well with caveolin-1, was not in close proximity to caveolin-1 (i.e., >120 A), and was not coimmunoprecipitated by anti-caveolin-1 from cell lysates. In summary, it was shown for the first time that SCP-2 (but not PITP) selectively interacted with caveolin-1, both within the cytoplasm and at the plasma membrane. These data contribute significantly to our understanding of the role of SCP-2 in cholesterol and phosphatidylinositol targeted from intracellular sites of synthesis in the endoplasmic reticulum to caveolae/lipid rafts at the cell surface plasma membrane.  相似文献   

13.
14.
Sterol carrier protein-2 (SCP-2) facilitates cholesterol (Ch) and phospholipid (PL) transfer/exchange between membranes and appears to play a key role in intracellular lipid trafficking. Whether SCP-2 can also facilitate lipid hydroperoxide (LOOH) transfer between membranes and thereby potentially enhance dissemination of peroxidative damage was examined in this study. Transfer kinetics of photochemically generated cholesterol hydroperoxide (ChOOH) species (5alpha-OOH, 6alpha/6beta-OOH, 7alpha/7beta-OOH) and phospholipid hydroperoxide (PLOOH) families (PCOOH, PEOOH, PSOOH) were determined, using HPLC with electrochemical detection for peroxide analysis. LOOH donor/acceptor pairs employed in transfer experiments included (i) all liposomes (e.g., agglutinable SUVs/ nonagglutinable LUVs); (ii) photoperoxidized erythrocyte ghosts/SUVs or vice versa; and (iii) SUVs/mitochondria. In a SUV/ghost system at 37 degrees C, the rate constant for total ChOOH spontaneous transfer was approximately 8 times greater than that for unoxidized Ch. Purified bovine liver and human recombinant SCP-2 exhibited an identical ability to stimulate overall ChOOH transfer, 0.5 unit/mL (based on [(14)C]Ch transfer) increasing the first-order rate constant (k) approximately 7-fold. SCP-2-enhanced translocation of individual ChOOHs increased with increasing hydrophilicity in the following order: 6beta-OOH < 6alpha-OOH < 5alpha-OOH < 7alpha/7beta-OOH. Likewise, SCP-2 stimulated PCOOH, PEOOH, or PSOOH transfer approximately 6-fold, but the net k was 1/5 that of 5alpha-OOH and 1/10 that of 7alpha/7beta-OOH. Donor membrane properties favoring SCP-2-enhanced LOOH transfer included (i) increasing PL unsaturation and (ii) increasing net negative charge imposed by phosphatidylserine. Cytotoxic relevance was demonstrated by showing that SCP-2 accelerates 7alpha-OOH transfer from SUVs to isolated mitochondria and that this enhances peroxide-induced loss of the mitochondrial membrane potential. On the basis of these findings, we postulate that SCP-2, by trafficking ChOOHs and PLOOHs in addition to parent lipids, might exacerbate cell injury under oxidative stress conditions.  相似文献   

15.
Although sterol carrier protein-2 (SCP-2) stimulates sterol transfer in vitro, almost nothing is known regarding the identity of the putative cholesterol binding site. Furthermore, the interrelationship(s) between this SCP-2 ligand binding site and the recently reported SCP-2 long chain fatty acid (LCFA) and long chain fatty acyl-CoA (LCFA-CoA) binding site(s) remains to be established. In the present work, two SCP-2 ligand binding sites were identified. First, both [4-(13)C]cholesterol and 22-(N-(7-nitrobenz-2-oxa-1, 3-diazol-4-yl)amino)-23,24-bisnor-5-cholen-3beta-ol (NBD-cholesterol) binding assays were consistent with a single cholesterol binding site in SCP-2. This ligand binding site had high affinity for NBD-cholesterol, K(d) = 4.15 +/- 0.71 nM. (13)C NMR-labeled ligand competition studies demonstrated that the SCP-2 high affinity cholesterol binding site also bound LCFA or LCFA-CoA. However, only the LCFA-CoA was able to effectively displace the SCP-2-bound [4-(13)C]cholesterol. Thus, the ligand affinities at this SCP-2 binding site were in the relative order cholesterol = LCFA-CoA > LCFA. Second, (13)C NMR studies demonstrated the presence of another ligand binding site on SCP-2 that bound either LCFA or LCFA-CoA but not cholesterol. Photon correlation spectroscopy was consistent with SCP-2 being monomeric in both liganded and unliganded states. In summary, both (13)C NMR and fluorescence techniques demonstrated for the first time that SCP-2 had a single high affinity binding site that bound cholesterol, LCFA, or LCFA-CoA. Furthermore, results with (13)C NMR supported the presence of a second SCP-2 ligand binding site that bound either LCFA or LCFA-CoA but not cholesterol. These data contribute to our understanding of a role for SCP-2 in both cellular cholesterol and LCFA metabolism.  相似文献   

16.
Although in vitro studies suggest a role for sterol carrier protein-2 (SCP-2) in cholesterol trafficking and metabolism, the physiological significance of these observations remains unclear. This issue was addressed by examining the response of mice overexpressing physiologically relevant levels of SCP-2 to a cholesterol-rich diet. While neither SCP-2 overexpression nor cholesterol-rich diet altered food consumption, increased weight gain, hepatic lipid, and bile acid accumulation were observed in wild-type mice fed the cholesterol-rich diet. SCP-2 overexpression further exacerbated hepatic lipid accumulation in cholesterol-fed females (cholesterol/cholesteryl esters) and males (cholesterol/cholesteryl esters and triacyglycerol). Primarily in female mice, hepatic cholesterol accumulation induced by SCP-2 overexpression was associated with increased levels of LDL-receptor, HDL-receptor scavenger receptor-B1 (SR-B1) (as well as PDZK1 and/or membrane-associated protein 17 kDa), SCP-2, liver fatty acid binding protein (L-FABP), and 3α-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase, without alteration of other proteins involved in cholesterol uptake (caveolin), esterification (ACAT2), efflux (ATP binding cassette A-1 receptor, ABCG5/8, and apolipoprotein A1), or oxidation/transport of bile salts (cholesterol 7α-hydroxylase, sterol 27α-hydroxylase, Na+/taurocholate cotransporter, Oatp1a1, and Oatp1a4). The effects of SCP-2 overexpression and cholesterol-rich diet was downregulation of proteins involved in cholesterol transport (L-FABP and SR-B1), cholesterol synthesis (related to sterol regulatory element binding protein 2 and HMG-CoA reductase), and bile acid oxidation/transport (via Oapt1a1, Oatp1a4, and SCP-x). Levels of serum and hepatic bile acids were decreased in cholesterol-fed SCP-2 overexpression mice, especially in females, while the total bile acid pool was minimally affected. Taken together, these findings support an important role for SCP-2 in hepatic cholesterol homeostasis.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Although liver fatty acid-binding protein (L-FABP) is an important binding site for various hydrophobic ligands in hepatocytes, its in vivo significance is not understood. We have therefore created L-FABP null mice and report here their initial analysis, focusing on the impact of this mutation on hepatic fatty acid binding capacity, lipid composition, and expression of other lipid-binding proteins. Gel-filtered cytosol from L-FABP null liver lacked the main fatty acid binding peak in the fraction that normally comprises both L-FABP and sterol carrier protein-2 (SCP-2). The binding capacity for cis-parinaric acid was decreased >80% in this region. Molar ratios of cholesterol/cholesterol ester, cholesteryl ester/triglyceride, and cholesterol/phospholipid were 2- to 3-fold greater, reflecting up to 3-fold absolute increases in specific lipid classes in the order cholesterol > cholesterol esters > phospholipids. In contrast, the liver pool sizes of nonesterified fatty acids and triglycerides were not altered. However, hepatic deposition of a bolus of intravenously injected [14C]oleate was markedly reduced, showing altered lipid pool turnover. An increase of approximately 75% of soluble SCP-2 but little or no change of other soluble (glutathione S-transferase, albumin) and membrane (fatty acid transport protein, CD36, aspartate aminotransferase, caveolin) fatty acid transporters was measured. These results (i) provide for the first time a quantitative assessment of the contribution of L-FABP to cytosolic fatty acid binding capacity, (ii) establish L-FABP as an important determinant of hepatic lipid composition and turnover, and (iii) suggest that SCP-2 contributes to the accumulation of cholesterol in L-FABP null liver.  相似文献   

19.
The domain structure of cholesterol in membranes and factors affecting it are not well understood. A method, based on kinetics of delta 5,7,9,(11),22-erogostatetraen-3 beta-ol (dehydroergosterol) fluorescence polarization change and not requiring separation of donor and acceptor membranes, was used to examine sterol domains in three-component cholesterol:dehydroergosterol:phospholipid small unilamellar vesicles (SUV). A new mathematical data treatment was developed to provide a direct correlation between molecular sterol exchange and steady-state dehydroergosterol fluorescence polarization measurements. The method identified multiple kinetic pools of sterol in SUV: a small but rapidly exchanging pool, a predominant slowly exchanging pool, and a very slowly exchangeable (nonexchangeable) pool. The relative sizes of the pools and half-times of exchange were highly dependent on the presence of acidic phospholipids and on cytosolic proteins involved in sterol transfer. Thus, the method provides a direct measure of molecular sterol transfer between membranes without separating donor and acceptor membranes.  相似文献   

20.
Xu Z  Farver W  Kodukula S  Storch J 《Biochemistry》2008,47(42):11134-11143
Niemann-Pick disease type C (NPC) is caused by defects in either the NPC1 or NPC2 gene and is characterized by accumulation of cholesterol and glycolipids in the late endosome/lysosome compartment. NPC2 is an intralysosomal protein that binds cholesterol in vitro. Previous studies demonstrated rapid rates of cholesterol transfer from NPC2 to model membranes [Cheruku, S. R., et al. (2006) J. Biol. Chem. 281, 31594-31604]. To model the potential role of NPC2 as a lysosomal cholesterol export protein, in this study we used fluorescence spectroscopic approaches to examine cholesterol transfer from membranes to NPC2, assessing the rate, mechanism, and regulation of this transport step. In addition, we examined the effect of NPC2 on the rate and kinetic mechanism of intermembrane sterol transport, to model the movement of cholesterol from internal lysosomal membranes to the limiting lysosomal membrane. The results support the hypothesis that NPC2 plays an important role in endo/lysosomal cholesterol trafficking by markedly accelerating the rates of cholesterol transport. Rates of sterol transfer from and between membranes were increased by as much as 2 orders of magnitude by NPC2. The transfer studies indicate that the mechanism of NPC2 action involves direct interaction of the protein with membranes. Such interactions were observed directly using FTIR spectroscopy and protein tryptophan spectral shifts. Additionally, cholesterol transfer by NPC2 was found to be greatly enhanced by the unique lysosomal phospholipid lyso-bisphosphatidic acid (LBPA), suggesting an important role for LBPA in NPC2-mediated cholesterol trafficking.  相似文献   

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