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1.
The interaction of high density lipoproteins (HDL) with the HDL receptor stimulates the translocation of cholesterol from intracellular pools to the plasma membrane where the cholesterol becomes available for removal by appropriate acceptors. The role of signal transduction through protein kinase C in HDL receptor-dependent cholesterol translocation and efflux was examined using cholesterol-loaded cultured human skin fibroblasts. Treatment of cells with HDL3 activated protein kinase C, demonstrated by a transient increase in membrane associated kinase activity. Kinase activation appeared to be dependent on binding of HDL3 to the HDL receptor, since tetranitromethane-modified HDL3, which does not bind to the receptor, was without effect. Translocation of intracellular sterol to the plasma membrane was stimulated by treatment of cells with the protein kinase C activators, dioctanoylglycerol and phorbol myristic acetate, and the calcium ionophore A23187. Conversely, treatment of cells with sphingosine, a protein kinase C inhibitor, reduced HDL3-mediated translocation and efflux of intracellular sterols. However, sphingosine had no effect on efflux of labeled cholesterol derived from the plasma membrane. Down-regulation of cellular protein kinase C activity by long term incubation with phorbol esters also inhibited HDL3-mediated efflux of intracellular sterols and abolished the ability of sphingosine to further inhibit HDL3-mediated efflux. These studies support the conclusion that HDL receptor-mediated translocation and efflux of intracellular cholesterol occurs through activation of protein kinase C.  相似文献   

2.
Cultured cells have on their cell surface a specific high-affinity binding site (receptor) for high density lipoproteins (HDL) which appears to promote cholesterol efflux. In this study we characterized the cellular mechanisms involved in HDL receptor-mediated transport of cholesterol from cultured human fibroblasts and bovine aortic endothelial cells. HDL3, chemically modified by tetranitromethane (TNM-HDL3), is not recognized by this receptor and was used as a control for efflux not mediated by HDL receptor binding. HDL3 and TNM-HDL3 were found to be equally effective in causing efflux of plasma membrane cholesterol radiolabeled with [3H]cholesterol. However, HDL3 was much more effective than TNM-HDL3 in causing efflux of [3H]cholesterol associated with intracellular membranes. By measuring movement of endogenously synthesized [3H]cholesterol to the plasma membrane, and into the medium, we found that HDL3 induced a rapid movement of [3H]cholesterol from a preplasma membrane compartment to the plasma membrane that preceded [3H]cholesterol efflux. This effect was not observed with TNM-HDL3. Thus, receptor binding of HDL3 appears to facilitate removal of cellular cholesterol from specific intracellular pools by initiation of translocation of intracellular cholesterol to the plasma membrane.  相似文献   

3.
The formation of large cholesterol-enriched high density lipoproteins (HDL1/HDLc) from typical HDL3 requires lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase activity, additional cholesterol, and a source of apolipoprotein (apo-) E. The present study explores the role of apo-E in promoting HDL1/HDLc formation and in imparting to these lipoprotein particles the ability to interact with the apo-B,E(low density lipoprotein (LDL] receptor. Incubation of normal canine serum with cholesterol-loaded mouse peritoneal macrophages resulted in the formation of HDL1/HDLc that competed with 125I-LDL for binding to the apo-B,E(LDL) receptors on cultured human fibroblasts. Cholesterol efflux from macrophages was necessary because incubation of normal canine serum with nonloaded macrophages did not cause HDL1/HDLc formation. However, cholesterol delivery to the serum was not sufficient to result in HDL1/HDLc formation. Apolipoprotein E had to be available. Incubation of apo-E-depleted canine serum with cholesterol-loaded J774 cells, a macrophage cell line that does not synthesize apo-E, demonstrated that no HDL1/HDLc formation was detected even in the presence of significant cholesterol efflux. However, addition of exogenous apo-E to the serum during the incubation with cholesterol-loaded J744 cells promoted the formation of large receptor-active HDL1/HDLc. The receptor binding activity of these particles produced in vitro correlated with the amount of apo-E incorporated into the HDL1/HDLc. Apolipoproteins A-I and C-III were ineffective in promoting HDL1/HDLc formation; thus, apo-E was unique in allowing HDL1/HDLc formation. These results demonstrate that when lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase activity, cholesterol, and apo-E are present in serum, typical HDL can be transformed in vitro into large cholesterol-rich HDL1/HDLc that are capable of binding to lipoprotein receptors.  相似文献   

4.
Recent reports from this laboratory indicate that exposure of cholesterol-loaded macrophages to high density lipoprotein 3 (HDL3) stimulates not only cholesterol efflux, but also results in a two- to threefold increase in apoE accumulation in the media (Dory, L., 1989. J. Lipid Res. 30: 809-816). The present experiments demonstrate that the effect of HDL3, and to a lesser extent HDL2, on apoE secretion is specific, concentration-dependent, and may require interaction with the HDL receptor. Very low density lipoproteins (VLDL) and low-density lipoproteins (LDL) fail to specifically stimulate apoE secretion by cholesterol-loaded macrophages. The effect of HLD3 is maximal at 25-50 micrograms/ml (0.26-0.52 microM) and can be totally abolished by mild nitrosylation (with 3 mM tetranitromethane (TNM)). Data are also presented to indicate that the increased rate of apoE secretion in the presence of HDL3 is not due to a "protective" effect of this lipoprotein on possible proteolytic degradation or cellular reuptake of apoE secreted into the media. The stimulatory effect of HDL on apoE secretion can be clearly dissociated from cholesterol efflux; HDL stimulates apoE secretion from oxysterol-treated cells in the absence of measurable cholesterol efflux, while TNM-HDL promotes substantial cholesterol efflux from cholesterol-loaded cells but has no effect on apoE secretion. The kinetics of apoE synthesis and secretion, determined in short-term labeling studies, demonstrate that under all experimental conditions examined a substantial portion of cellular apoE is not secreted. Furthermore, in cholesterol-loaded cells HDL3 increases apoE secretion essentially by diversion of a greater portion of cellular apoE pool for secretion. While HDL3 has no effect on the rate of apoE synthesis, cellular apoE turns over two-fold faster in cells incubated in the presence of HDL3 than in its absence (t 1/2 = 11 +/- 2 and 22 +/- 4 min, respectively), an observation corresponding well with the changes in the rates of apoE secretion under similar conditions. The HDL3-mediated increase in apoE secretion by cholesterol-loaded macrophages suggests another mechanism by which HDL exerts a protective effect in the development of atherosclerosis; increased contribution to the metabolic pool of apoE by peripheral tissues may lead to a more effective clearance of peripheral cholesterol by the liver (reverse cholesterol transport).  相似文献   

5.
This study compares the roles of ABCG1 and scavenger receptor class B type I (SR-BI) singly or together in promoting net cellular cholesterol efflux to plasma HDL containing active LCAT. In transfected cells, SR-BI promoted free cholesterol efflux to HDL, but this was offset by an increased uptake of HDL cholesteryl ester (CE) into cells, resulting in no net efflux. Coexpression of SR-BI with ABCG1 inhibited the ABCG1-mediated net cholesterol efflux to HDL, apparently by promoting the reuptake of CE from medium. However, ABCG1-mediated cholesterol efflux was not altered in cholesterol-loaded, SR-BI-deficient (SR-BI(-/-)) macrophages. Briefly cultured macrophages collected from SR-BI(-/-) mice loaded with acetylated LDL in the peritoneal cavity did exhibit reduced efflux to HDL. However, this was attributable to reduced expression of ABCG1 and ABCA1, likely reflecting increased macrophage cholesterol efflux to apolipoprotein E-enriched HDL during loading in SR-BI(-/-) mice. In conclusion, cellular SR-BI does not promote net cholesterol efflux from cells to plasma HDL containing active LCAT as a result of the reuptake of HDL-CE into cells. Previous findings of increased atherosclerosis in mice transplanted with SR-BI(-/-) bone marrow probably cannot be explained by a defect in macrophage cholesterol efflux.  相似文献   

6.
Cholesterol transport between cells and high-density lipoproteins   总被引:18,自引:0,他引:18  
Various types of studies in humans and animals suggest strongly that HDL is anti-atherogenic. The anti-atherogenic potential of HDL is thought to be due to its participation in reverse cholesterol transport, the process by which cholesterol is removed from non-hepatic cells and transported to the liver for elimination from the body. Extensive studies in cell culture systems have demonstrated that HDL is an important mediator of sterol transport between cells and the plasma compartment. The topic of this review is the mechanisms that account for sterol movement between HDL and cells. The most prominent and easily measured aspect of sterol movement between HDL and cells is the rapid bidirectional transfer of cholesterol between the lipoprotein and the plasma membrane. This movement occurs by unmediated diffusion, and in most situations its rate in each direction is limited by the rate of desorption of sterol molecules from the donor surface into the adjacent water phase. The net transfer of sterol mass out of cells occurs when there is either a relative enrichment of sterol within the plasma membrane or a depletion of sterol in HDL. Recent studies suggest that certain minor subfractions of HDL (with pre-beta mobility on agarose gel electrophoresis and containing apoprotein A-I but no apo A-II) are unusually efficient at promoting efflux of cell sterol. To what extent efflux to these HDL fractions is balanced by influx from the lipoprotein has not yet been established clearly. The prevention and reversal of atherosclerosis require the mobilization of cholesterol from internal (non-plasma membrane) cellular locations. To some extent, this may involve the retroendocytosis of HDL. However, most mobilization probably involves the transport of internal sterol to the plasma membrane, followed by desorption to extracellular HDL. Several laboratories are investigating the transport of sterol from intracellular locations to the plasma membrane. Studies on biosynthetic sterol (probably originating mostly in the smooth endoplasmic reticulum) suggest that there is rapid transport to the plasma membrane in lipid-rich vesicles. Important features of this transport are that it bypasses the Golgi apparatus and may be positively regulated by the specific binding of HDL to the plasma membrane.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.
The interaction of human serum high density lipoproteins (HDL) with mouse peritoneal macrophages and human blood monocytes was studied. Saturation curves for binding of apolipoprotein E-free [125I]HDL3 showed at least two components: non-specific binding and specific binding that saturated at approximately 40 micrograms HDL protein/ml. Scatchard analysis of specific binding of apo E-free [125I]-HDL3 to cultured macrophages yielded linear plots indicative of a single class of specific binding sites. Pretreatment of [125I]HDL3 with various apolipoprotein antibodies (anti apo A-I, anti apo A-II, anti apo C-II, anti apo C-III and anti apo E) and preincubation of the cells with anti-idiotype antibodies against apo A-I and apo A-II prior to the HDL binding studies revealed apolipoprotein A-I as the ligand involved in specific binding of HDL. Cellular cholesterol accumulation via incubation with acetylated LDL led to an increase in HDL binding sites as well as an increase in the activity of the cytoplasmic cholesterol esterifying enzyme acyl-CoA:cholesterol acyltransferase (ACAT). Incubation of the cholesterol-loaded cells in the presence of various ACAT inhibitors (Sandoz 58.035, Octimibate-Nattermann, progesterone) revealed a time- and dose-dependent amplification in HDL binding and HDL-mediated cholesterol efflux. It is concluded that the homeostasis of cellular cholesterol in macrophages is regulated in part by the number of HDL binding sites and that ACAT inhibitors enhance HDL-mediated cholesterol efflux from peripheral cells.  相似文献   

8.
Paraoxonase-1 (PON1) is a high-density lipoprotein (HDL)-associated serum enzyme thought to make a major contribution to the antioxidant and anti-inflammatory capacities of HDLs. However, the role of PON1 in the modulation of cholesterol efflux is poorly understood. The aim of our study was to investigate the involvement of PON1 in the regulation of cholesterol efflux, especially the mechanism by which it modulates HDL-mediated cholesterol transport. The enrichment of HDL(3) with human PON1 enhanced, in a dose-dependent manner, cholesterol efflux from THP-1 macrophage-like cells and ABCA1-enriched J774 macrophages. Moreover, an additive effect was observed when ABCA1-enriched J774 macrophages were incubated with both PON1 and apo-AI. Interestingly, PON1 alone was able to mediate cholesterol efflux from J774 macrophages and to upregulate ABCA1 expression on J774 macrophages. Immunofluorescence measurement showed an increase in PON1 levels in the cytoplasm of J774 macrophages overexpressing ABCA1. PON1 used an apo-AI-like mechanism to modulate cholesterol efflux from rapid and slow efflux pools derived from the lipid raft and nonraft domains of the plasma membrane, respectively. This was supported by the fact that ABCA1 protein was incrementally expressed by J774 macrophages within the first few hours of incubation with cholesterol-loaded J774 macrophages and that cyclodextrin significantly inhibited the capacity of PON1 to modulate cholesterol efflux from macrophages. This finding suggested that PON1 plays an important role in the antiatherogenic properties of HDLs and may exert its protective function outside the lipoprotein environment.  相似文献   

9.

Objectives

The uptake of oxidized LDL (oxLDL) by macrophages is a key initial event in atherogenesis, and the removal of oxidized lipids from artery wall via reverse cholesterol transport is considered antiatherogenic. The aims of this study were to investigate the pathways mediating the removal of oxysterols from oxLDL-loaded macrophages, and the subsequent uptake of the oxysterols by hepatocytes.

Methods

LDL was labeled with [3H]cholesterol, and LDL-[3H]cholesterol was oxidized by copper using a standard method. [3H]oxysterol formation in oxLDL was analyzed by thin layer chromatography. oxLDL-[3H]sterol was incubated with macrophages, allowing the uptake of [3H]sterol by macrophages. [3H]sterol efflux from macrophages mediated by ATP binding cassette transporters (ABCA1, ABCG1), or scavenger receptor class B type I (SR-BI) was measured. The subsequent uptake of the [3H]sterol by hepatocytes was also determined.

Results

7-Ketocholesterol was the major oxysterol formed in oxLDL, and it was significantly higher in oxLDL compared with that in native LDL (naLDL). oxLDL-derived sterol efflux to HDL from macrophages was significantly increased compared with naLDL-derived sterol, and it was mainly mediated by ABCG1, but not by ABCA1 or SR-BI. Moreover, although HDL dose-dependently induced sterol efflux from macrophages, only the exported sterol by ABCG1 pathway was efficiently taken up by hepatocytes.

Conclusions

ABCG1 mediates oxysterol efflux from oxLDL-loaded macrophages, and the exported oxysterol by ABCG1 pathway can be selectively taken up by hepatocytes.  相似文献   

10.
Transport of the fluorescent cholesterol analog dehydroergosterol (DHE) from the plasma membrane was studied in J774 macrophages (Mphis) with normal and elevated cholesterol content. Cells were labeled with DHE bound to methyl-beta-cyclodextrin. In J774, Mphis with normal cholesterol, intracellular DHE became enriched in recycling endosomes, but was not highly concentrated in the trans-Golgi network or late endosomes and lysosomes. After raising cellular cholesterol by incubation with acetylated low-density lipoprotein (AcLDL), DHE was transported to lipid droplets, and less sterol was found in recycling endosomes. Transport of DHE to droplets was very rapid (t1/2 = 1.5 min after photobleaching) and did not require metabolic energy. In cholesterol-loaded J774 Mphis, the initial fraction of DHE in the plasma membrane was reduced, and rapid DHE efflux from the plasma membrane to intracellular organelles was observed. This rapid sterol transport was not related to plasma membrane vesiculation, as DHE did not become enriched in endocytic vesicles formed after sphingomyelinase C treatment of cells. When cells were incubated with DHE ester incorporated into AcLDL, fluorescence of the sterol was first found in punctate endosomes. After a chase, this DHE colocalized with transferrin in a distribution similar to cells labeled with DHE delivered by methyl-beta-cyclodextrin. Our results indicate that elevation of sterol levels in Mphis enhances transport of sterol from the plasma membrane by a non-vesicular pathway.  相似文献   

11.
High density lipoprotein (HDL) binds to cell surface receptors and promotes selective removal of excess cholesterol from intracellular pools. The activity of this receptor is up-regulated when cells become loaded with cholesterol, but the relative degree of up-regulation depends on the growth state of the cells. The current study demonstrates that treatment of proliferating fibroblasts with gamma-interferon (IFN) increases the activity of the HDL receptor in association with a decrease in the rate of cell proliferation. Addition of IFN during the growth phase reduced the number of cells but had little effect on total cell protein, indicating that IFN inhibited cell proliferation but produced larger cells. IFN treatment increased the number of high affinity receptors for HDL on the surface of cholesterol-loaded fibroblasts, whether receptor binding was expressed per cell or per unit of cell surface area, cell protein, or cell cholesterol. IFN treatment also appeared to increase the amount of 110-kDa HDL binding protein in fibroblast membranes that has been postulated to represent the HDL receptor molecule. The IFN-induced increase in HDL receptor activity was associated with an enhanced ability of HDL3 to remove cholesterol from intracellular pools. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that inhibition of cell proliferation increases HDL receptor-mediated transport of excess cholesterol from cells, possibly to rid cells of cholesterol that accumulates in response to a reduced rate of membrane synthesis.  相似文献   

12.
Oxidized low density lipoprotein (LDL) has been found to exhibit numerous potentially atherogenic properties, including transformation of macrophages to foam cells. It is believed that high density lipoprotein (HDL) protects against atherosclerosis by removing excess cholesterol from cells of the artery wall, thereby retarding lipid accumulation by macrophages. In the present study, the relative rates of HDL-mediated cholesterol efflux were measured in murine resident peritoneal macrophages that had been loaded with acetylated LDL or oxidized LDL. Total cholesterol content of macrophages incubated for 24 h with either oxidized LDL or acetylated LDL was increased by 3-fold. However, there was no release of cholesterol to HDL from cells loaded with oxidized LDL under conditions in which cells loaded with acetylated LDL released about one-third of their total cholesterol to HDL. Even mild degrees of oxidation were associated with impairment of cholesterol efflux. Macrophages incubated with vortex-aggregated LDL also displayed impaired cholesterol efflux, but aggregation could not account for the entire effect of oxidized LDL. Resistance of apolipoprotein B (apoB) in oxidized LDL to lysosomal hydrolases and inactivation of hydrolases by aldehydes in oxidized LDL were also implicated. The subcellular distribution of cholesterol in oxidized LDL-loaded cells and acetylated LDL-loaded cells was investigated by density gradient fractionation, and this indicated that cholesterol derived from oxidized LDL accumulates within lysosomes. Thus impairment of cholesterol efflux in oxidized LDL-loaded macrophages appears to be due to lysosomal accumulation of oxidized LDL rather than to impaired transport of cholesterol from a cytosolic compartment to the plasma membrane.  相似文献   

13.
The mobilization of cholesterol from intracellular pools to the plasma membrane is a determinant that governs its availability for efflux to extracellular acceptors. NPC1 and NPC2 are proteins localized in the late endosome and control cholesterol transport from the lysosome to the plasma membrane. Here, we report that NPC1 and NPC2 gene expression is induced by oxidized LDL (OxLDL) in human macrophages. Because OxLDLs contain natural activators of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor alpha (PPARalpha), a fatty acid-activated nuclear receptor, the regulation of NPC1 and NPC2 by PPARalpha and the consequences on cholesterol trafficking were further studied. NPC1 and NPC2 expression is induced by synthetic PPARalpha ligands in human macrophages. Furthermore, PPARalpha activation leads to an enrichment of cholesterol in the plasma membrane. By contrast, incubation with progesterone, which blocks postlysosomal cholesterol trafficking, as well as NPC1 and NPC2 mRNA depletion using small interfering RNA, abolished ABCA1-dependent cholesterol efflux induced by PPARalpha activators. These observations identify a novel regulatory role for PPARalpha in the control of cholesterol availability for efflux that, associated with its ability to inhibit cholesterol esterification and to stimulate ABCA1 and scavenger receptor class B type I expression, may contribute to the stimulation of reverse cholesterol transport.  相似文献   

14.
The murine scavenger receptor class B, type I (mSR-BI) is a receptor for high density lipoprotein (HDL), low density lipoprotein (LDL), and acetylated LDL (AcLDL). It mediates selective uptake of lipoprotein lipid and stimulates efflux of [(3)H]cholesterol to lipoproteins. SR-BI-mediated [(3)H]cholesterol efflux was proposed to be independent of ligand binding. In this study, using anti-mSR-BI antibody KKB-1 and two mSR-BI mutants with altered ligand binding properties, we demonstrated that SR-BI-mediated [(3)H]cholesterol efflux to lipoproteins was correlated with ligand binding and lipid uptake activities of the receptor. The KKB-1 antibody, which blocked lipoprotein binding without substantially altering the cholesterol oxidase-accessible cellular [(3)H]cholesterol, also blocked [(3)H]cholesterol efflux to HDL and LDL. One of the SR-BI mutants, which has a double substitution of arginines for glutamines at positions 402 and 418 (Q402R/Q418R), exhibited a high level of LDL binding and lipid uptake from LDL, but lost most of the corresponding HDL receptor activity. This mutant could mediate efficient [(3)H]cholesterol efflux to LDL, but not to HDL. Another mutant, M158R, with an arginine in place of methionine at position 158, exhibited reduced HDL and LDL receptor activities, but apparently normal AcLDL receptor activity. This mutant could mediate efficient [(3)H]cholesterol efflux to AcLDL, but not to HDL or LDL. These results suggest that SR-BI-stimulated [(3)H]cholesterol efflux to lipoproteins critically depends on ligand binding to this receptor and raise the possibility that the mechanisms of selective lipid uptake and [(3)H]cholesterol efflux may be intimately related.  相似文献   

15.
To test whether the altered lipid composition of high-density lipoprotein (HDL) particles influences their ability to interact with the HDL receptor on cultured fibroblasts, HDL3 isolated from normal and diabetic donors with different degrees of hypertriglyceridemia was subjected to binding competition, cholesterol efflux, and net cholesterol transport assays. When HDL3 particles from different subjects were incubated with cholesterol-loaded fibroblasts, the initial rates of cholesterol efflux from cells to HDL3 particles appeared to be an exclusive function of the relative ability of HDL3 to interact with the HDL receptor. Variation in lipid composition of HDL3 particles did not appear to have any significant influence on either the receptor-binding or the efflux-promoting abilities of HDL3. When the movement of cholesterol between cells and HDL3 particles was allowed to approach equilibrium, the lipid composition of HDL3 became an important factor in determining the net amount of cholesterol removed from cells, with cholesterol-deficient triacylglycerol-rich HDL3 particles having the best capacity to promote net transport of cholesterol from cells. These results suggest that the ability of HDL to bind to its cell-surface receptor, rather than variations in the lipid composition of the HDL particle, is the major determinant of cholesterol efflux from cells to HDL particles. However, the lipid composition of HDL as well as its receptor-binding activity determine the net amount of cholesterol transported from cells over long-term incubation.  相似文献   

16.
Although low-density lipoprotein (LDL) receptor-mediated cholesterol uptake through clathrin-coated pits is now well understood, the molecular details and organizing principles for selective cholesterol uptake/efflux (reverse cholesterol transport, RCT) from peripheral cells remain to be resolved. It is not yet completely clear whether RCT between serum lipoproteins and the plasma membrane occurs primarily through lipid rafts/caveolae or from non-raft domains. To begin to address these issues, lipid raft/caveolae-, caveolae-, and non-raft-enriched fractions were resolved from purified plasma membranes isolated from L-cell fibroblasts and MDCK cells by detergent-free affinity chromatography and compared with detergent-resistant membranes isolated from the same cells. Fluorescent sterol exchange assays between lipoproteins (VLDL, LDL, HDL, apoA1) and these enriched domains provided new insights into supporting the role of lipid rafts/caveolae and caveolae in plasma membrane/lipoprotein cholesterol dynamics: (i) lipids known to be translocated through caveolae were detected (cholesteryl ester, triacylglycerol) and/or enriched (cholesterol, phospholipid) in lipid raft/caveolae fractions; (ii) lipoprotein-mediated sterol uptake/efflux from lipid rafts/caveolae and caveolae was rapid and lipoprotein specific, whereas that from non-rafts was very slow and independent of lipoprotein class; and (iii) the rate and lipoprotein specificity of sterol efflux from lipid rafts/caveolae or caveolae to lipoprotein acceptors in vitro was slower and differed in specificity from that in intact cells-consistent with intracellular factors contributing significantly to cholesterol dynamics between the plasma membrane and lipoproteins.  相似文献   

17.
Cultured extrahepatic cells possess a specific high affinity binding site (receptor) for high density lipoprotein (HDL) that is induced by cholesterol delivery to cells. To characterize the binding recognition site(s) on HDL, the ability of HDL to interact with cultured human fibroblasts was assayed after chemical alteration of specific apoprotein amino acid residues. Reduction and alkylation, acetylation, and cyclohexanedione treatment of HDL3 had little or no effect on its cellular binding. Treatment of HDL3 with tetranitromethane (TNM), however, caused a large dose-dependent decrease in binding, with maximum inhibition at 3 mM. Amino acid analysis of the TNM-treated particles showed specific alteration of tyrosine residues, but sodium dodecyl sulfate-gel electrophoresis demonstrated apoprotein cross-linking coincident with decreased binding. These results suggest that modification of HDL tyrosine residues and/or cross-linking of HDL apoproteins alters the ligand site recognized by the HDL receptor. Gradient gel electrophoresis, molecular sieve chromatography, and electron microscopy showed only minor changes in size distribution and shape of HDL3 particles after treatment with 3 mM TNM, but at higher TNM concentrations, coalescence and aggregation of particles was evident. Treatment of HDL3 with 3 mM TNM affected neither its promotion of the low affinity (receptor-independent) cholesterol efflux from cells nor its ability to accept cholesterol from an albumin suspension, yet promotion of high affinity (receptor-dependent) cholesterol efflux from cells was abolished. The finding that TNM treatment of HDL3 decreases both its receptor binding and its promotion of cholesterol efflux from cells without substantial alteration of its physical properties supports the hypothesis that the HDL receptor functions to facilitate cholesterol transport from cells.  相似文献   

18.
Huang ZH  Gu D  Lange Y  Mazzone T 《Biochemistry》2003,42(13):3949-3955
Scavenger receptor BI influences multiple aspects of cellular sterol metabolism. In this series of studies, we evaluated the effect of scavenger receptor BI expression on the distribution and movement of sterol between the plasma membrane and the endoplasmic reticulum in macrophages, by comparing control J774 cells to J774 cells in which SR-BI expression was constitutively increased 3-fold. J774 cells with increased expression of SR-BI (J774-SRBI cells) esterified plasma membrane cholesterol more rapidly as compared to control cells. The esterification of endogenously synthesized cholesterol was also more rapid in cells with increased SR-BI expression; this could be partially suppressed by removing cholesterol from the plasma membrane. The increased plasma membrane sterol esterification in J774-SRBI cells was not due to increased acyl-coA:cholesterol acyltransferase activity and was observed even though J774-SRBI cells manifested a smaller free cholesterol pool in the endoplasmic reticulum. Cholesterol ester hydrolysis was also more rapid in J774-SRBI cells. Increased expression of SR-BI also facilitated the clearance of cellular cholesterol ester to HDL(3). This latter observation, combined with the measurement of the smaller ER free cholesterol pool in J774-SRBI cells, suggests that the free cholesterol derived from the hydrolysis of cholesterol ester was rapidly transported back to the plasma membrane. It is concluded that expression of SR-BI in macrophages increases the rate of free cholesterol transport, and modulates free cholesterol distribution between the plasma membrane and the internal membrane compartments in macrophages.  相似文献   

19.
We have demonstrated previously that HDL-mediated efflux of plasma membrane cholesterol is independent of specific binding of apolipoproteins to the high density lipoprotein (HDL) receptor in either control or cholesterol-enriched cells (Karlin, J. B., Johnson, W. J., Benedict, C. R., Chacko, G. K., Phillips, M. C., and Rothblat, G. H. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 12557-12564 and Johnson, W. J., Mahlberg, F. H., Chacko, G. K., Phillips, M. C., and Rothblat, G. H. (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 14099-14106). The present studies were conducted to determine if the process for removal of intracellular (lysosomal) cholesterol is similar to that of membrane cholesterol or if, in contrast, it is selectively regulated by specific apolipoproteins of HDL. For these reasons, we examined the influence of each of the major apolipoproteins of human HDL, apoAI, apoAII, and apoCs on the metabolism of membrane and lysosomal cholesterol in a macrophage foam cell model. We developed an experimental system which allows, for the first time, the simultaneous determination of lysosomal hydrolysis of cholesteryl ester and efflux and esterification of both lysosomal and membrane cholesterol. J774 and elicited mouse peritoneal macrophages were loaded with cholesteryl ester within lysosomes through phagocytosis of sonicated lipid droplets. Membrane and lysosomal pools of cholesterol were differentially radiolabeled. Discoidal complexes of egg phosphatidylcholine and purified apolipoproteins having a similar size and composition were used as cholesterol acceptors. Our results demonstrate that lysosomal hydrolysis of cholesteryl ester is independent of the presence of extracellular acceptors. Lysosomal production of cholesterol stimulates the esterification by acyl-CoA:cholesterol acyltransferase of membrane and lysosomal cholesterol. All the particles tested induce the efflux of both pools of cholesterol at a similar ratio. As efflux is stimulated, esterification by acyl-CoA:cholesterol acyltransferase is reduced. We conclude that none of these apolipoproteins selectively influences the efflux or the esterification of membrane of lysosomal cholesterol. In addition, we observe that particles containing apoAI are the most efficient acceptors, but this effect is not linked to specific binding to the HDL receptor.  相似文献   

20.
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