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1.
Internalization of apoE-containing very low density protein (VLDL) by hepatocytes in vivo and in vitro leads to apoE recycling and resecretion. Because of the role of apoE in VLDL metabolism, apoE recycling may influence lipoprotein assembly or remnant uptake. However, apoE is also a HDL protein, and apoE recycling may be related to reverse cholesterol transport. To investigate apoE recycling, apoE(-/-) mouse hepatocytes were incubated (pulsed) with wild-type mouse lipoproteins, and cells and media were collected at chase periods up to 24 h. When cells were pulsed with VLDL, apoE was resecreted within 30 min. Although the mass of apoE in the media decreased with time, it could be detected up to 24 h after the pulse. Intact intracellular apoE was also detectable 24 h after the pulse. ApoE was also resecreted when cells were pulsed with HDL. When apoA-I was included in the chase media after a pulse with VLDL, apoE resecretion increased 4-fold. Furthermore, human apoE was resecreted from wild-type mouse hepatocytes after a pulse with human VLDL. Finally, apoE was resecreted from mouse peritoneal macrophages after pulsing with VLDL. We conclude that 1) HDL apoE recycles in a quantitatively comparable fashion to VLDL apoE; 2) apoE recycling can be modulated by extracellular apoA-I but is not affected by endogenous apoE; and 3) recycling occurs in macrophages as well as in hepatocytes, suggesting that the process is not cell-specific.  相似文献   

2.
We have investigated apolipoprotein E (apoE) recycling in Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells, a peripheral cell that does not produce lipoproteins or express apoE. Using a pulse-chase protocol in which cells were pulsed with 125I-apoE-VLDL and chased for different periods, approximately 30% of the apoE internalized during the pulse was resecreted within a 4 h chase in a relatively lipid-free state. The addition of lysosomotropic agents or brefeldin A had no effect on apoE recycling. Unlike previous results with hepatocytes and macrophages, neither apoA-I nor upregulation of ABCA1 stimulated apoE recycling. However, cyclodextrin, which extracts cholesterol from plasma membrane lipid rafts, increased recycling. Confocal studies revealed that apoE, internalized during a 1 h pulse, colocalizes with early endosomal antigen-1, Rab5, Rab11a, and lysobisphosphatidic acid but not with lysosomal-associated membrane protein-1. Colocalization of apoE and Rab11a persisted even after cells had been chased for 1 h, suggesting a pool of apoE within the endosomal recycling compartment (ERC). Our data suggest that apoE recycling in CHO cells is linked to cellular cholesterol removal via the ERC and phospholipid-containing acceptors in a pathway alternative to the ABCA1-apoA-I axis.  相似文献   

3.
The dynamics of ABCA1-mediated apoA-I lipidation were investigated in intact human fibroblasts induced with 22(R)-hydroxycholesterol and 9-cis-retinoic acid (stimulated cells). Specific binding parameters of (125)I-apoA-I to ABCA1 at 37 degrees C were determined: K(d) = 0.65 microg/ml, B(max) = 0.10 ng/microg cell protein. Lipid-free apoA-I inhibited the binding of (125)I-apoA-I to ABCA1 more efficiently than pre-beta(1)-LpA-I, reconstituted HDL particles r(LpA-I), or HDL(3) (IC(50) = 0.35 +/- 1.14, apoA-I; 1.69 +/- 1.07, pre-beta(1)-LpA-I; 17.91 +/- 1.39, r(LpA-I); and 48.15 +/- 1.72 microg/ml, HDL(3)). Treatment of intact cells with either phosphatidylcholine-specific phospholipase C or sphingomyelinase affected neither (125)I-apoA-I binding nor (125)I-apoA-I/ABCA1 cross-linking. We next investigated the dynamics of apoA-I lipidation by monitoring the kinetic of apoA-I dissociation from ABCA1. The dissociation of (125)I-apoA-I from normal cells at 37 degrees C was rapid (t((1/2)) = 1.4 +/- 0.66 h; n = 3) but almost completely inhibited at either 15 or 4 degrees C. A time course analysis of apoA-I-containing particles released during the dissociation period showed nascent apoA-I-phospholipid complexes that exhibited alpha-electrophoretic mobility with a particle size ranging from 9 to 20 nm (designated alpha-LpA-I-like particles), whereas lipid-free apoA-I incubated with ABCA1 mutant (Q597R) cells was unable to form such particles. These results demonstrate that: 1) the physical interaction of apoA-I with ABCA1 does not depend on membrane phosphatidylcholine or sphingomyelin; 2) the association of apoA-I with lipids reduces its ability to interact with ABCA1; and 3) the lipid translocase activity of ABCA1 generates alpha-LpA-I-like particles. This process plays in vivo a key role in HDL biogenesis.  相似文献   

4.
Deficiency of ABCA1 impairs apolipoprotein E metabolism in brain   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
ABCA1 is a cholesterol transporter that is widely expressed throughout the body. Outside the central nervous system (CNS), ABCA1 functions in the biogenesis of high-density lipoprotein (HDL), where it mediates the efflux of cholesterol and phospholipids to apolipoprotein (apo) A-I. Deficiency of ABCA1 results in lack of circulating HDL and greatly reduced levels of apoA-I. ABCA1 is also expressed in cells within the CNS, but its roles in brain lipid metabolism are not yet fully understood. In the brain, glia synthesize the apolipoproteins involved in CNS lipid metabolism. Here we demonstrate that glial ABCA1 is required for cholesterol efflux to apoA-I and plays a key role in facilitating cholesterol efflux to apoE, which is the major apolipoprotein in the brain. In both astrocytes and microglia, ABCA1 deficiency reduces lipid efflux to exogenous apoE. The impaired ability to efflux lipids in ABCA1-/- glia results in lipid accumulation in both astrocytes and microglia under normal culture conditions. Additionally, apoE secretion is compromised in ABCA1-/- astrocytes and microglia. In vivo, deficiency of ABCA1 results in a 65% decrease in apoE levels in whole brain, and a 75-80% decrease in apoE levels in hippocampus and striatum. Additionally, the effect of ABCA1 on apoE is selective, as apoJ levels are unchanged in brains of ABCA1-/- mice. Taken together, these results show that glial ABCA1 is a key influence on apoE metabolism in the CNS.  相似文献   

5.
6.
Kypreos KE 《Biochemistry》2008,47(39):10491-10502
In this study, the ability of the lipid transporter ABCA1 and apolipoprotein CIII (apoCIII) to promote the de novo biogenesis of apoCIII-containing HDL in vivo and the role of this HDL in apoCIII-induced hypertriglyceridemia were investigated, using adenovirus-mediated gene transfer in apoE (-/-) x apoA-I (-/-) mice or ABCA1 (-/-) mice. Injection of apoE (-/-) x apoA-I (-/-) mice with 8 x 10 (8) pfu of an adenovirus expressing the wild-type human apoCIII (AdGFP-CIII g) generated HDL-like particles and triggered only a modest increase in plasma cholesterol and triglyceride levels of these mice, 3-5 days postinfection. Plasma human apoCIII was distributed among HDL, VLDL/IDL, and LDL in these mice. In contrast, ABCA1 (-/-) mice treated similarly failed to form HDL particles and developed severe hypertriglyceridemia which could be alleviated by coinfection with an adenovirus expressing human LpL, while their plasma cholesterol levels remained unchanged 3-5 days postinfection with AdGFP-CIII g. Human apoCIII in these mice accumulated exclusively on VLDL. Control experiments confirmed that the differences between apoE (-/-) x apoA-I (-/-) and ABCA1 (-/-) mice expressing human apoCIII were not due to differences in apoCIII expression. Overall, these data show that ABCA1 and human apoCIII promote the formation of apoCIII-containing HDL-like particles that are distinct from classical apoE- or apoA-I-containing HDL. Formation of apoCIII-containing HDL prevents excess accumulation of plasma apoCIII on VLDL and allows for the efficient lipolysis of VLDL triglycerides by LpL. Furthermore, the data establish that ABCA1 and apoCIII-containing HDL play key roles in the prevention of apoCIII-induced hypertriglyceridemia in mice.  相似文献   

7.
This study was undertaken to identify the alpha-helical domains of human apoE that mediate cellular cholesterol efflux and HDL assembly via ATP-binding cassette transporter A1 (ABCA1). The C-terminal (CT) domain (residues 222-299) of apoE was found to stimulate ABCA1-dependent cholesterol efflux in a manner similar to that of intact apoE2, -E3, and -E4 in studies using J774 macrophages and HeLa cells. The N-terminal (NT) four-helix bundle domain (residues 1-191) was a relatively poor mediator of cholesterol efflux. On a per molecule basis, the CT domain stimulated cholesterol efflux with the same efficiency (Km approximately 0.2 microM) as intact apoA-I and apoE. Gel filtration chromatography of conditioned medium from ABCA1-expressing J774 cells revealed that, like the intact apoE isoforms, the CT domain promoted the assembly of HDL particles with diameters of 8 and 13 nm. Removal of the CT domain abolished the formation of HDL-sized particles, and only larger particles eluting in the void volume were formed. Studies with CT truncation mutants of apoE3 and peptides indicated that hydrophobic helical segments governed the efficiency of cellular cholesterol efflux and that conjoined class A and G amphipathic alpha-helices were required for optimal efflux activity. Collectively, the data suggest that the CT lipid-binding domain of apoE encompassing amino acids 222-299 is necessary and sufficient for mediating ABCA1 lipid efflux and HDL particle assembly.  相似文献   

8.
The molecular mechanisms underlying the apoA-I/ABCA1 endocytic trafficking pathway in relation to high density lipoprotein (HDL) formation remain poorly understood. We have developed a quantitative cell surface biotinylation assay to determine the compartmentalization and trafficking of apoA-I between the plasma membrane (PM) and intracellular compartments (ICCs). Here we report that (125)I-apoA-I exhibited saturable association with the PM and ICCs in baby hamster kidney cells stably overexpressing ABCA1 and in fibroblasts. The PM was found to have a 2-fold higher capacity to accommodate apoA-I as compared with ICCs. Overexpressing various levels of ABCA1 in baby hamster kidney cells promoted the association of apoA-I with PM and ICCs compartments. The C-terminal deletion of apoA-I Delta(187-243) and reconstituted HDL particles exhibited reduced association of apoA-I with both the PM and ICCs. Interestingly, cell surface biotinylation with a cleavable biotin revealed that apoA-I induces ABCA1 endocytosis. Such endocytosis was impaired by naturally occurring mutations of ABCA1 (Q597R and C1477R). To better understand the role of the endocytotic pathway in the dynamics of the lipidation of apoA-I, a pulse-chase experiment was performed, and the dissociation (re-secretion) of (125)I-apoA-I from both PM and ICCs was monitored over a 6-h period. Unexpectedly, we found that the time required for 50% dissociation of (125)I-apoA-I from the PM was 4-fold slower than that from ICCs at 37 degrees C. Finally, treatment of the cells with phosphatidylcholine-specific phospholipase C, increased the dissociation of apoA-I from the PM. This study provides evidence that the lipidation of apoA-I occurs in two kinetically distinguishable compartments. The finding that apoA-I specifically mediates the continuous endocytic recycling of ABCA1, together with the kinetic data showing that apoA-I associated with ICCs is rapidly re-secreted, suggests that the endocytotic pathway plays a central role in the genesis of nascent HDL.  相似文献   

9.
After receptor-mediated endocytosis of triglyceride-rich lipoproteins (TRL) into the liver, TRL particles are immediately disintegrated in peripheral endosomal compartments. Whereas core lipids and apoprotein B are delivered for degradation into lysosomes, TRL-derived apoE is efficiently recycled back to the plasma membrane. This is followed by apoE re-secretion and association of apoE with high density lipoproteins (HDL). Because HDL and apoE can independently promote cholesterol efflux, we investigated whether recycling of TRL-derived apoE in human hepatoma cells and fibroblasts could be linked to intracellular cholesterol transport. In this study we demonstrate that HDL(3) does not only act as an extracellular acceptor for recycled apoE but also stimulates the recycling of internalized TRL-derived apoE. Furthermore, radioactive pulse-chase experiments indicate that apoE recycling is accompanied by cholesterol efflux. Confocal imaging reveals co-localization of apoE and cholesterol in early endosome antigen 1-positive endosomes. During apoE re-secretion, HDL(3)-derived apoA-I is found in these early endosome antigen 1, cholesterol-containing endosomes. As shown by time-lapse fluorescence microscopy, apoE recycling involves the intracellular trafficking of apoA-I to pre-existing and TRL-derived apoE/cholesterol-containing endosomes in the periphery. Thus, these studies provide evidence for a new intracellular link between TRL-derived apoE, cellular cholesterol transport, and HDL metabolism.  相似文献   

10.
To investigate the metabolism of HDL-apolipoprotein E (apoE) particles in human plasma, we isolated a fraction of plasma HDL-apoEs that lack apoA-I (HDL-LpE) from subjects with apoE3/3 phenotype by immunoaffinity. Plasma HDL-LpE had a particle size ranging from 9 nm to 18.5 nm in diameter and was characterized by two-dimensional nondenaturing gradient gel electrophoresis as having either gamma-, prebeta1-, prebeta2-, or alpha-electrophoretic mobility. HDL-LpE was also present in the medium of cultured human hepatoma cell lines and monocyte-derived macrophages. The majority of apoE3 was found as a monomeric form in HDL-LpE and floated at density d > 1.21 g/ml. Plasma levels of HDL-LpE in normolipidemic, CETP-deficient, and ABCA1-deficient subjects were 0.72 +/- 0.15 mg/dl (n = 12), 1.77 +/- 0.75 mg/dl (n = 3), and 0.55 +/- 0.11 mg/dl (n = 3), respectively. The ratio of HDL-apoE containing apoA-I to HDL-LpE was significantly higher 4 h after a fat load, representing a 35 +/- 9% increase (n = 3). Isolated plasma HDL-LpE3 was as effective as apoE3, reconstituted HDL particles, or apoA-I in promoting cellular cholesterol efflux. These results demonstrate that 1) plasma HDL-LpE may have hepatogenous and macrophagic origins; 2) HDL-LpE was preserved even with large reductions in apoA-I-containing lipoproteins; 3) HDL-LpE was active in the transfer of apoE to triglyceride-rich lipoproteins, and 4) HDL-LpEs efficiently take up cell-derived cholesterol.  相似文献   

11.
Apolipoprotein A-I (apoA-I)-mediated cholesterol efflux involves the binding of apoA-I to the plasma membrane via its C terminus and requires cellular ATP-binding cassette transporter (ABCA1) activity. ApoA-I also stimulates secretion of apolipoprotein E (apoE) from macrophage foam cells, although the mechanism of this process is not understood. In this study, we demonstrate that apoA-I stimulates secretion of apoE independently of both ABCA1-mediated cholesterol efflux and of lipid binding by its C terminus. Pulse-chase experiments using (35)S-labeled cellular apoE demonstrate that macrophage apoE exists in both relatively mobile (E(m)) and stable (E(s)) pools, that apoA-I diverts apoE from degradation to secretion, and that only a small proportion of apoA-I-mobilized apoE is derived from the cell surface. The structural requirements for induction of apoE secretion and cholesterol efflux are clearly dissociated, as C-terminal deletions in recombinant apoA-I reduce cholesterol efflux but increase apoE secretion, and deletion of central helices 5 and 6 decreases apoE secretion without perturbing cholesterol efflux. Moreover, a range of 11- and 22-mer alpha-helical peptides representing amphipathic alpha-helical segments of apoA-I stimulate apoE secretion whereas only the C-terminal alpha-helix (domains 220-241) stimulates cholesterol efflux. Other alpha-helix-containing apolipoproteins (apoA-II, apoA-IV, apoE2, apoE3, apoE4) also stimulate apoE secretion, implying a positive feedback autocrine loop for apoE secretion, although apoE4 is less effective. Finally, apoA-I stimulates apoE secretion normally from macrophages of two unrelated subjects with genetically confirmed Tangier Disease (mutations C733R and c.5220-5222delTCT; and mutations A1046D and c.4629-4630insA), despite severely inhibited cholesterol efflux. We conclude that apoA-I stimulates secretion of apoE independently of cholesterol efflux, and that this represents a novel, ABCA-1-independent, positive feedback pathway for stimulation of potentially anti-atherogenic apoE secretion by alpha-helix-containing molecules including apoA-I and apoE.  相似文献   

12.
The production of lipids, apolipoproteins (apo), and lipoproteins induced by oleic acid has been examined in Caco-2 cells. The rates of accumulation in the control medium of 15-day-old Caco-2 cells of triglycerides, unesterified cholesterol, and cholesteryl esters were 102 +/- 8, 73 +/- 5, and 11 +/- 1 ng/mg cell protein/h, respectively; the accumulation rates for apolipoproteins A-I, B, C-III, and E were 111 +/- 9, 53 +/- 4, 13 +/- 1, and 63 +/- 4 ng/mg cell protein/h, respectively. Whereas apolipoproteins A-IV and C-II were detected by immunoblotting, apoA-II was absent in most culture media. In contrast to an early production of apolipoproteins A-I and E occurring 2 days after plating, the apoB expression appeared to be differentiation-dependent and was not measurable in the medium until the sixth day post-confluency. In the control medium, very low density lipoproteins (VLDL), low density lipoproteins (LDL), high density lipoproteins (HDL), and lipid-poor very high density lipoproteins (VHDL) accounted for 12%, 46%, 18%, and 24% of the total lipid and apolipoprotein contents, respectively. The triglyceride-rich VLDL contained mainly apoE (75%) and apoB (23%), while the protein moiety of LDL was composed of apoB (59%), apoE (20%), apoA-I (15%), and apoC-III (6%). The cholesterol-rich HDL contained mainly apoA-I (69%) and apoE (27%). In the control medium, major portions of apolipoproteins B and C-III (93-97%) were present in LDL, whereas the main parts of apoA-I (92%) and apoE (76%) were associated with HDL and VHDL. Oleate increased the production of triglycerides 10-fold, cholesteryl esters 7-fold, and apoB 2- to 4-fold. There was also a moderate increase (39%) in the production of apoC-III but no significant changes in those of apolipoproteins A-I and E. These increases were reflected mainly in a 55-fold elevation in the concentration of VLDL, and a 2-fold increase in the level of LDL; there were no significant changes in HDL and VHDL. VLDL contained the major parts of total neutral lipids (74-86%), apoB (65%), apoC-III (81%) and apoE (58%). In the presence of oleate, the VLDL, LDL, HDL, and VHDL accounted for 76%, 15%, 3%, and 6% of the total lipoproteins, respectively.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
14.
It is well accepted that both apolipoprotein A-I (apoA-I) and ABCA1 play crucial roles in HDL biogenesis and in the human atheroprotective system. However, the nature and specifics of apoA-I/ABCA1 interactions remain poorly understood. Here, we present evidence for a new cellular apoA-I binding site having a 9-fold higher capacity to bind apoA-I compared with the ABCA1 site in fibroblasts stimulated with 22-(R)-hydroxycholesterol/9-cis-retinoic acid. This new cellular apoA-I binding site was designated "high-capacity binding site" (HCBS). Glyburide drastically reduced (125)I-apoA-I binding to the HCBS, whereas (125)I-apoA-I showed no significant binding to the HCBS in ABCA1 mutant (Q597R) fibroblasts. Furthermore, reconstituted HDL exhibited reduced affinity for the HCBS. Deletion of the C-terminal region of apoA-I (Delta187-243) drastically reduced the binding of apoA-I to the HCBS. Interestingly, overexpressing various levels of ABCA1 in BHK cells promoted the formation of the HCBS. The majority of the HCBS was localized to the plasma membrane (PM) and was not associated with membrane raft domains. Importantly, treatment of cells with phosphatidylcholine-specific phospholipase C, but not sphingomyelinase, concomitantly reduced the binding of (125)I-apoA-I to the HCBS, apoA-I-mediated cholesterol efflux, and the formation of nascent apoA-I-containing particles. Together, these data suggest that a functional ABCA1 leads to the formation of a major lipid-containing site for the binding and the lipidation of apoA-I at the PM. Our results provide a biochemical basis for the HDL biogenesis pathway that involves both ABCA1 and the HCBS, supporting a two binding site model for ABCA1-mediated nascent HDL genesis.  相似文献   

15.
Eight proteins potentially involved in cholesterol efflux [ABCA1, ABCG1, CYP27A1, phospholipid transfer protein (PLTP), scavenger receptor type BI (SR-BI), caveolin-1, cholesteryl ester transfer protein, and apolipoprotein A-I (apoA-I)] were overexpressed alone or in combination in RAW 264.7 macrophages. When apoA-I was used as an acceptor, overexpression of the combination of ABCA1, CYP27A1, PLTP, and SR-BI (Combination I) enhanced the efflux by 4.3-fold. It was established that the stimulation of efflux was due to increased abundance of ABCA1 and increased apoA-I binding to non-ABCA1 sites on macrophages. This combination caused only a small increase of the efflux to isolated HDL. When HDL was used as an acceptor, overexpression of caveolin-1 or a combination of caveolin-1 and SR-BI (Combination II) was the most active, doubling the efflux to HDL, without affecting the efflux to apoA-I. When tested in the in vivo mouse model of cholesterol efflux, overexpression of ABCA1 and Combination I elevated cholesterol export from macrophages to plasma, liver, and feces, whereas overexpression of caveolin-1 or Combination II did not have an effect. We conclude that pathways of cholesterol efflux using apoA-I as an acceptor make a predominant contribution to cholesterol export from macrophages in vivo.  相似文献   

16.
Molecular interactions between apoE and ABCA1: impact on apoE lipidation   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Apolipoprotein E (apoE)/ABCA1 interactions were investigated in human intact fibroblasts induced with 22(R)-hydroxycholesterol and 9-cis-retinoic acid (stimulated cells). Here, we show that purified human plasma apoE3 forms a complex with ABCA1 in normal fibroblasts. Lipid-free apoE3 inhibited the binding of (125)I-apoA-I to ABCA1 more efficiently than reconstituted HDL particles (IC(50) = 2.5 +/- 0.4 microg/ml vs. 12.3 +/- 1.3 microg/ml). ApoE isoforms showed similar binding for ABCA1 and exhibited identical kinetics in their abilities to induce ABCA1-dependent cholesterol efflux. Mutation of ABCA1 associated with Tangier disease (C1477R) abolished both apoE3 binding and apoE3-mediated cholesterol efflux. Analysis of apoE3-containing particles generated during the incubation of lipid-free apoE3 with stimulated normal cells showed nascent apoE3/cholesterol/phospholipid complexes that exhibited prebeta-electrophoretic mobility with a particle size ranging from 9 to 15 nm, whereas lipid-free apoE3 incubated with ABCA1 mutant (C1477R) cells was unable to form such particles. These results demonstrate that 1). apoE association with lipids reduced its ability to interact with ABCA1; 2). apoE isoforms did not affect apoE binding to ABCA1; 3). apoE-mediated ABCA1-dependent cholesterol efflux was not affected by apoE isoforms in fibroblasts; and 4). the lipid translocase activity of ABCA1 generates apoE-containing high density-sized lipoprotein particles. Thus, ABCA1 is essential for the biogenesis of high density-sized lipoprotein containing only apoE particles in vivo.  相似文献   

17.
Low levels of transgenic mouse apolipoprotein E (apoE) suppress atherosclerosis in apoE knockout (apoE-/-) mice without normalizing plasma cholesterol. To test whether this is due to facilitation of cholesterol efflux from the vessel wall, we produced apoA-I-/-/apoE-/- mice with or without the transgene. Even without apoA-I and HDL, apoA-I-/-/apoE-/- mice had the same amount of aorta cholesteryl ester as apoE-/- mice. Low apoE in the apoA-I-/-/apoE-/- transgenic mice reduced aortic lesions by 70% versus their apoA-I-/-/apoE-/- siblings. To define the free cholesterol (FC) efflux capacity of lipoproteins from the various genotypes, sera were assayed on macrophages expressing ATP-binding cassette transporter A1 (ABCA1). Surprisingly, ABCA1 FC efflux was twice as high to sera from the apoA-I-/-/apoE-/- or apoE-/- mice compared with wild-type mice, and this activity correlated with serum apoA-IV. Immunodepletion of apoA-IV from apoA-I-/-/apoE-/- serum abolished ABCA1 FC efflux, indicating that apoAI-V serves as a potent acceptor for FC efflux via ABCA1. With increasing apoE expression, apoA-IV and FC acceptor capacity decreased, indicating a reciprocal relationship between plasma apoE and apoA-IV. Low plasma apoE (1-3 x 10(-8) M) suppresses atherosclerosis by as yet undefined mechanisms, not dependent on the presence of apoA-I or HDL or an increased capacity of serum acceptors for FC efflux.  相似文献   

18.
ATP-binding cassette transporter (ABC) A1 is required for the lipidation of apolipoprotein A-I to generate high density lipoprotein (HDL). This process is proposed to occur through a retro-endocytosis pathway in which apoA-I internalizes with ABCA1 and generates HDL from the endosomal compartments before resecretion. The aim of this study was to determine the route of apoA-I endocytosis and whether endocytosis contributes to HDL biogenesis. Using confocal microscopy, we found that internalized apoA-I only transiently colocalized with transferrin, a retro-endocytosis marker. Instead, apoA-I perfectly colocalized with a bulk phase uptake marker (fluorescein isothiocyanate-dextran) and, at later time points, with LysoTracker in several cell models including macrophages, fibroblasts, and baby hamster kidney cells. ABCA1 colocalized poorly with internalized apoA-I. To determine the contribution of internalized apoA-I to HDL biogenesis, we specifically removed apoA-I from the cell surface and analyzed the fate of internalized apoA-I. We found that 23% of cell-associated apoA-I was internalized at steady state. Of internalized apoA-I, only 20% was converted to HDL, and the rest was degraded, consistent with a lysosomal destination. We also found that apoA-I was released approximately five times faster from the plasma membrane than from the intracellular compartments. From these kinetic parameters, we estimated that approximately 5.6% of apoA-I that interacts with cells is degraded and that internalized apoA-I contributes to approximately 1.4% of total HDL production. We also found that blocking endocytosis with sucrose or cytochalasin D did not decrease cholesterol efflux or HDL biogenesis. We therefore conclude that the plasma membrane is the main platform where ABCA1-mediated lipidation of apoA-I occurs.  相似文献   

19.
ABCA1 is an ATP-binding cassette protein that transports cellular cholesterol and phospholipids onto high density lipoproteins (HDL) in plasma. Lack of ABCA1 in humans and mice causes abnormal lipidation and increased catabolism of HDL, resulting in very low plasma apoA-I, apoA-II, and HDL. Herein, we have used Abca1-/- mice to ask whether ABCA1 is involved in lipidation of HDL in the central nervous system (CNS). ApoE is the most abundant CNS apolipoprotein and is present in HDL-like lipoproteins in CSF. We found that Abca1-/- mice have greatly decreased apoE levels in both the cortex (80% reduction) and the CSF (98% reduction). CSF from Abca1-/- mice had significantly reduced cholesterol as well as small apoE-containing lipoproteins, suggesting abnormal lipidation of apoE. Astrocytes, the primary producer of CNS apoE, were cultured from Abca1+/+, +/-, and -/- mice, and nascent lipoprotein particles were collected. Abca1-/- astrocytes secreted lipoprotein particles that had markedly decreased cholesterol and apoE and had smaller apoE-containing particles than particles from Abca1+/+ astrocytes. These findings demonstrate that ABCA1 plays a critical role in CNS apoE metabolism. Since apoE isoforms and levels strongly influence Alzheimer's disease pathology and risk, these data suggest that ABCA1 may be a novel therapeutic target.  相似文献   

20.
Nine monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) against apoA-I reacting with distinct but overlapping epitopes covering more than 90% of the sequence have been used to block the interaction of 125I-labeled high density lipoprotein (125I-HDL) with HepG2 cells in order to delineate the cell binding domain of apolipoprotein A-I (apoA-I). While 2 mAbs reacting with epitopes exclusively localized in the N-terminal region (residues 1 to 86) enhanced slightly association of 125I-HDL, all other mAbs, which react with epitopes localized in the regions of amphipathic alpha-helical repeats, inhibited that association by 9 to 15%. Although this inhibition is not significant compared to the effect of an irrelevant mAb, combination of these mAbs could significantly inhibit the association of 125I-HDL (32 to 43%) as could polyclonal antibodies (up to 95%). These results are compatible with the concept of HDL binding to these cells via the nonexclusive interaction of each of the amphipathic alpha-helical repeats of apoA-I. When the same approach was applied to block the association of 3H-cholesteryl ether (CE)-labeled HDL to HepG2 cells, each anti-apoA-I could inhibit by 15 to 25% the cellular association of cholesteryl ether while mAbs in combination or polyclonal antibodies could inhibit this association up to 45% or 60%, respectively. The cholesteryl ether radioactivity that remained associated with the cells (40%) in the presence of polyclonal antibodies could be effectively blocked by addition of an antibody against the receptor binding domain of apoE (1D7). Therefore, the differential cellular association of cholesteryl ether compared to apolipoprotein can be explained by the presence of apoE secreted by HepG2 and apoE or apoB/E receptors. Thus, we conclude that the optimum uptake of both cholesteryl ether and apoA-I of HDL by cells requires the accessibility of the entire apoA-I and the cooperative binding of the amphipathic alpha-helical repeats to HepG2 cell membranes. This type of interaction would explain the competitive binding observed for apoA-I, -A-II, and -A-IV by others.  相似文献   

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