首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
The topography and dynamics of receptors for acetylated (acetyl) and malondialdehyde-modified (MDA) low-density lipoprotein (LDL) in the plasma membrane of cultured mouse peritoneal macrophages were investigated using a new technique. Modified LDL labeled with gold particles was used to visualize LDL receptors in the plane of the plasma membrane in platinum-carbon surface replicas of critical point-dried cells. It was found that the native distribution of unoccupied acetyl-LDL receptors is diffuse, whereas unoccupied MDA-LDL receptors are preclustered in the plasma membrane. Competition and double labeling experiments suggest the existence of two distinct classes of receptor sites for acetyl-LDL and MDA-LDL.  相似文献   

2.
The surface distribution of the scavenger receptors for acetylated low-density lipoprotein (acetyl-LDL) and their endocytic behavior were studied by the direct immunoperoxidase method using monomeric conjugates of horseradish peroxidase with Fab' antibody raised against LDL. The receptors were demonstrated to be distributed diffusely on the surface membrane of cultured peritoneal macrophages, with preferential localization in coated pit regions. With temperature shift from 4 degrees C to 37 degrees C, acetyl-LDL bound to the surface membrane rapidly disappeared, but became detectable in coated vesicles or lysosomes. Further incubation in the presence of acetyl-LDL revealed lipid vacuoles devoid of a limiting membrane in the cytoplasm, transforming macrophages into typical foam cells. These data suggest that the binding of acetyl-LDL to its receptors triggers the clustering of the receptors into the coated pit regions through which acetyl-LDL is endocytosed by coated vesicles to be degraded in lysosomes with subsequent intracellular accumulation of cholesterol esters.  相似文献   

3.
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   

4.
Subcutaneous injection of murine macrophage cell line P388D1 into syngeneic DBA/2 produced tumors, which upon solubilization with 40 mM octyl glucoside contained acetylated low density lipoprotein binding activity. The tumor-derived receptor specifically bound acetylated low density lipoprotein with an affinity of approximately 3 X 10(-8) M but did not bind low density lipoprotein or high density lipoprotein. It was identical in binding specificity, affinity, and Pronase sensitivity to the receptor in intact cells or that obtained from solubilized cultured cell membranes. Partial purification of the receptor was achieved by solubilizing tumors with 1% Triton X-100 followed by chromatography on polyethyleneimine cellulose. After elution with a NaCl gradient in the presence of octyl glucoside and association with liposomes, a 287-fold purification of the receptor was achieved. The receptor was identified by specific ligand blotting as a 260,000-dalton protein having a pI of approximately 6.0. Binding to the receptor by acetylated low density lipoprotein, malondialdehyde-modified low density lipoprotein, and maleic anhydride-modified serum albumin was demonstrated by ligand blotting. A single receptor protein can, therefore, account for the binding of multiple types of charge-modified lipoprotein and nonlipoprotein ligands to the macrophage cell surface.  相似文献   

5.
Chylomicrons play a role in atherosclerosis, however, because the mechanisms involved in the cell uptake of these particles are not fully understood, investigations were carried out using a radioactively labeled protein-free triacylglycerol-rich emulsion incubated with peritoneal macrophages obtained from normal and apoE-knockout mice. Experiments were done in the presence of substances that inhibit several endocytic processes: EDTA for low density lipoprotein receptor, fucoidan for scavenger receptor, cytochalasin B for phagocytosis, and a lipopolysaccharide for lipoprotein lipase. In addition, triacylglycerol-rich emulsions were also prepared in the presence of native or modified radioactively labeled low density lipoprotein particles that are known to accumulate in the arterial intima. Probucol was also used to prevent the possible role played by an antioxidant in triacylglycerol-rich emulsion uptake. We have shown that triacylglycerol-rich emulsion alone is taken up by a coated-pit-dependent mechanism, mediated by macrophage secretion of apolipoprotein E. Furthermore, native, aggregated, acetylated, and moderately macrophage-oxidized low density lipoprotein stimulate the uptake of a triacylglycerol-rich emulsion through several mechanisms such as an actin-dependent pathway, scavenger receptors, and lipolysis mediated by lipoprotein lipase. On the other hand, in spite of the interaction of low density lipoprotein forms with a triacylglycerol-rich emulsion, the cellular triacylglycerol-rich emulsion uptake is impaired by copper-oxidized low density lipoprotein, possibly due to its diminished affinity towards lipoprotein lipase. We have also shown that macrophages take up aggregated low density lipoprotein better than the acetylated or oxidized forms of low density lipoprotein.  相似文献   

6.
Macrophages carry receptors on their surface for acetylated low density lipoprotein (ac-LDL). Receptor-mediated endocytosis of ac-LDL is followed by intracellular cholesterol accumulation. We investigated whether occupation of these binding sites evokes the release of hydrolytic enzymes from mouse peritoneal macrophages cultured for up to 48 h. ac-LDL at concentrations ranging from 25-250 micrograms protein/ml was noted to promote in a dose-dependent fashion secretion of the neutral proteinase elastase (EC 3.4.21.37) and the lysosomal acid hydrolases N-acetyl-beta-glucosaminidase (EC 3.2.1.30), beta-glucuronidase (EC 3.2.1.31), beta-galactosidase (EC 3.2.1.23), alpha-mannosidase (EC 3.2.1.24) and cathepsin D (EC 3.4.23.5). This stimulatory effect was non-cytotoxic. LDL modified by treatment with malondialdehyde was also capable of augmenting enzyme liberation into culture supernates. These findings may have implications for some aspects of the atherosclerotic process.  相似文献   

7.
Human monocyte-derived macrophages were demonstrated to have separate and morphologically distinct binding sites for low density lipoprotein (LDL) and acetylated LDL (AcLDL). Using an indirect immunoperoxidase technique and electron microscopy, only LDL was shown to bind to its receptor in coated pits on the macrophage membrane, whereas the distribution of AcLDL-receptor complexes was dependent upon whether or not the cells were fixed prior to incubation with AcLDL. In cells incubated with AcLDL, then fixed, electron-dense precipitate was found in aggregates, sometimes near pseudopodia; fixed cells incubated with AcLDL had electron-dense precipitate more uniformly spread along the membrane. These data suggest that the 'scavenger' receptor is diffusely distributed in the membrane and that following AcLDL binding the receptors cluster in regions of the membrane which do not contain coated pits.  相似文献   

8.
A specific high affinity binding site for the serum glycoprotein transferrin was identified on murine peritoneal macrophages. The binding reached equilibrium within 60 min and was reversible, saturable, and specific for transferrin. Although the presence of this receptor was detected on the cell surface by studies carried out using intact cells, the majority (70 to 90%) of the binding activity was detectable only in detergent extracts of such cells. This suggests that a substantial portion of the binding activity is localized within the macrophage. The association constant (Ka) for binding to intact cells (6 to 9 X 10(8) M-1) was comparable to values reported for transferrin receptors described on other cell types. The expression of transferrin binding activity was examined in macrophages exhibiting qualitatively and quantitatively different degrees of functional activation. Resident peritoneal macrophages, exudate macrophages primed by elicitation with pyran copolymer, and activated macrophages induced by chronic infection of mice with bacillus Calmette-Guerin (BCG) or elicitation with heat killed Propionibacterium acnes (P. acnes) had low numbers of binding sites (1000 to 5000 total sites/cell). Macrophages elicited by sterile inflammatory agents (thioglycollate broth, fetal bovine serum, or casein) all exhibited a greater number of transferrin receptors (15,000 to 20,000 total sites/cell). This modulation did not appear to result from differential shifts between surface and internal loci. Our results suggest that the expression of the transferrin receptor may be a useful marker of the responsive stage of macrophage functional activation and the membrane changes that accompany activation.  相似文献   

9.
Etretinate or acitretin are efficiently delivered to cultured human fibroblasts in the presence of low density lipoproteins, high density lipoproteins or human serum albumin. In contrast to acitretin, delivery of etretinate to fibroblasts is more efficiently achieved with human serum albumin than with lipoproteins. The uptake of etretinate and acitretin via low density lipoproteins delivery, does not take place via the low density lipoprotein-receptor endocytotic pathway but mostly through a passive exchange with the plasma membrane. However, in contrast to acitretin, the exchange of etretinate seems to occur alter binding of etretinate-loaded low density lipoproteins to the apolipoprotein B receptors. No differences are observed in binding, internalization and degradation of native, etretinate-loaded low density lipoproteins and acitretin-loaded low density lipoproteins, suggesting that the presence of these retinoids in low density lipoproteins does not alter their processing by the cells. Furthermore, the presence of these retinoids in the cells does not notably affect, under our experimental conditions, the catabolism of native low density lipoproteins.  相似文献   

10.
《The Journal of cell biology》1983,97(4):1156-1168
Mouse peritoneal macrophages can be induced to accumulate cholesteryl esters by incubating them in the presence of acetylated low density lipoprotein. The cholesteryl esters are sequestered in neutral lipid droplets that remain in the cell even when the acetylated low density lipoprotein is removed from the culture media. Previous biochemical studies have determined that the cholesterol component of cholesteryl ester droplets constantly turns over with a half time of 24 h by a cyclic process of de-esterification and re-esterification. We have used morphologic techniques to determine the spatial relationship of cholesteryl ester, free cholesterol, and lipase activity during normal turnover and when turnover is disrupted. Lipid droplets were surrounded by numerous 7.5-10.0-nm filaments; moreover, at focal sites on the margin of each droplet there were whorles of concentrically arranged membrane that penetrated the matrix. Histochemically detectable lipase activity was associated with these stacks of membrane. Using filipin as a light and electron microscopic probe for free cholesterol, we determined that a pool of free cholesterol was associated with each lipid droplet. Following incubation in the presence of the exogenous cholesterol acceptor, high density lipoprotein, the cholesteryl ester droplets disappeared and were replaced with lipid droplets of a different lipid composition. Inhibition of cholesterol esterification caused cholesteryl ester droplets to disappear and free cholesterol to accumulate in numerous myelin-like structures in the body of the cell.  相似文献   

11.
Previous studies have examined lipoprotein metabolism by macrophages following prolonged exposure (>24 h) to macrophage colony-stimulating factor (M-CSF). Because M-CSF activates several signaling pathways that could rapidly affect lipoprotein metabolism, we examined whether acute exposure of macrophages to M-CSF alters the metabolism of either native or modified lipoproteins. Acute incubation of cultured J774 macrophages and resident mouse peritoneal macrophages with M-CSF markedly enhanced low density lipoproteins (LDL) and beta-migrating very low density lipoproteins (beta-VLDL) stimulated cholesteryl [(3)H]oleate deposition. In parallel, M-CSF treatment increased the association and degradation of (125)I-labeled LDL or beta-VLDL without altering the amount of lipoprotein bound to the cell surface. The increase in LDL and beta-VLDL metabolism did not reflect a generalized effect on lipoprotein endocytosis and metabolism because M-CSF did not alter cholesterol deposition during incubation with acetylated LDL. Moreover, M-CSF did not augment beta-VLDL cholesterol deposition in macrophages from LDL receptor (-/-) mice, indicating that the effect of M-CSF was mediated by the LDL receptor. Incubation of macrophages with pertussis toxin, a specific inhibitor of G(i/o) protein signaling, had no effect on cholesterol deposition during incubation with beta-VLDL alone, but completely blocked the augmented response promoted by M-CSF. In addition, incubation of macrophages with the direct G(i/o) protein activator, mastoparan, mimicked the effect of M-CSF by enhancing cholesterol deposition in cells incubated with beta-VLDL, but not acetylated LDL. In summary, M-CSF rapidly enhances LDL receptor-mediated metabolism of native lipoproteins by macrophages through activation of a G(i/o) protein signaling pathway. Together, these findings describe a novel pathway for regulating lipoprotein metabolism.  相似文献   

12.
Receptor-mediated endocytosis of oxidized low density lipoprotein (OxLDL) by macrophages has been implicated in foam cell transformation in the process of atherogenesis. Although several scavenger receptor molecules, including class A scavenger receptors and CD36, have been identified as OxLDL receptors on macrophages, additional molecules on macrophages may also be involved in the recognition of OxLDL. From a cDNA library of phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate-stimulated THP-1 cells, we isolated a cDNA encoding a novel protein designated SR-PSOX (scavenger receptor that binds phosphatidylserine and oxidized lipoprotein), which acts as a receptor for OxLDL. SR-PSOX was a type I membrane protein consisting of 254 amino acids, expression of which was shown on human and murine macrophages with a molecular mass of 30 kDa. SR-PSOX could specifically bind with high affinity, internalize, and degrade OxLDL. The recognition of OxLDL was blocked by polyinosinic acid and dextran sulfate but not by acetylated low density lipoprotein. Taken together, SR-PSOX is a novel class of molecule belonging to the scavenger receptor family, which may play important roles in pathophysiology including atherogenesis.  相似文献   

13.
Interleukin 1 (IL-1) is a major cytokine of macrophages secreted by several stimulants such as lipopolysaccharide (LPS). Macrophages are known to possess the scavenger receptor for acetylated low density lipoprotein (acetyl-LDL) and maleylated albumin. In the present study we determined effects of these ligands on LPS-induced IL-1 production by rat peritoneal macrophages. These ligands themselves did not induce IL-1 production. However, upon short incubation with acetyl-LDL, LPS-induced IL-1 production was significantly suppressed. The extent of the suppression was proportional to cellular cholesteryl esters. Thus, intracellular accumulation of cholesteryl esters might be responsible for suppression of LPS-induced IL-1 production.  相似文献   

14.
Proteins of the PAT family, named after perilipin, adipophilin, and TIP47 (tail-interacting protein of 47 kDa), are associated with lipid droplets and have previously been localized by immunofluorescence microscopy exclusively to the droplet surface. These proteins are considered not to be present in any other subcellular compartment. By applying the high resolution technique of freeze-fracture electron microscopy combined with immunogold labeling, we now demonstrate that in macrophages and adipocytes PAT family proteins are, first, distributed not only in the surface but also throughout the lipid droplet core and, second, are integral components of the plasma membrane. Under normal culture conditions these proteins are dispersed in the cytoplasmic leaflet of the plasma membrane. Stimulation of lipid droplet formation by incubation of the cells with acetylated low density lipoprotein leads to clustering of the PAT family proteins in raised plasma membrane domains. Fractures penetrating beneath the plasma membrane demonstrate that lipid droplets are closely apposed to these domains. A similar distribution pattern of labeling in the form of linear aggregates within the clusters is apparent in the cytoplasmic monolayer of the plasma membrane and the immediately adjacent outer monolayer of the lipid droplet. The aggregation of the PAT family proteins into such assemblies may facilitate carrier-mediated lipid influx from the extracellular environment into the lipid droplet. Lipid droplets appear to acquire their PAT proteins by interaction with plasma membrane domains enriched in these proteins.  相似文献   

15.
Macrophages isolated from a variety of organs in several animal species exhibit high affinity binding sites that recognize chemically modified proteins. One of these binding sites recognizes human plasma low density lipoprotein (LDL) in which the positive charges on the epsilon-amino groups of lysine have been removed or neutralized by chemical modification, thus giving the protein an enhanced negative charge. Effective treatments include reaction of LDL with organic acid anhydrides (acetylation or maleylation) and reaction with aldehydes, such as treatment with malondialdehyde. After the negatively-charged LDL binds to the surface receptor sites, it is rapidly internalized by the macrophages by endocytosis and hydrolyzed in lysosomes. The liberated cholesterol is reesterified in the cytoplasm, producing massive cholesteryl ester deposition. The binding site for negatively-charged LDL has been demonstrated so far only on macrophages and other scavenger cells. It is not expressed in cultured fibroblasts, smooth muscle cells, lymphocytes, or adrenal cells. In addition to its affinity for acetylated LDL and malondialdehyde-treated LDL, the macrophage site binds a variety of polyanions. It exhibits a particularly high affinity for certain sulfated polysaccharides (dextran sulfate and fucoidin), certain polynucleotides (polyinosinic acid and polyguanylic acid), polyvinyl sulfate, and maleylated albumin. It is possible that the site that binds negatively-charged LDL may be responsible for the massive accumulation of cholesteryl esters that occurs in vivo in macrophages and other scavenger cells in patients with high levels of circulating plasma LDL.  相似文献   

16.
Human blood monocyte-derived macrophages that had been cultured for 7 days in the presence of 20% whole human serum exhibited saturable degradation of low-density lipoprotein (LDL). This degradation could be abolished by pre-incubating the cells with a high concentration of LDL in the medium and increased by pre-incubating the cells in medium containing lipoprotein-deficient serum. Cells obtained from the blood of homozygous familial-hypercholesterolaemic (FH) patients only exhibited a low rate of non-saturable degradation of LDL, even when pre-incubated without lipoproteins. Thus the saturable degradation of LDL by normal cells was mediated by the LDL receptors that are defective in FH patients and little LDL was taken up and degraded through any of the other endocytotic processes present in macrophages. Degradation by normal cells pre-incubated with lipoprotein-deficient serum had a higher apparent affinity for LDL than that of cells maintained in whole serum, which suggests that incubation with lipoprotein-deficient serum may not only induce the formation of LDL receptors but may also have a direct effect on the receptors themselves. Monocyte-derived macrophages from normal and FH subjects showed similar saturable degradation of acetylated LDL and also of LDL complexed with dextran sulphate. Maximal degradation of each was in the same range as the degradation of unmodified LDL by normal cells, and was not increased if the cells were pre-incubated with lipoprotein-deficient serum.  相似文献   

17.
Liver X receptors (LXR alpha and LXR beta) are nuclear receptors, which are important regulators of cholesterol and lipid metabolism. LXRs control genes involved in cholesterol efflux in macrophages, bile acid synthesis in liver and intestinal cholesterol absorption. LXRs also regulate genes participating in lipogenesis. To determine whether the activation of LXR promotes or inhibits development of atherosclerosis, T-0901317, a synthetic LXR ligand, was administered to low density lipoprotein receptor (LDLR)(-/-) mice. T-0901317 significantly reduced the atherosclerotic lesions in LDLR(-/-) mice without affecting plasma total cholesterol levels. This anti-atherogenic effect correlated with the plasma concentration of T-0901317, but not with high density lipoprotein cholesterol, which was increased by T-0901317. In addition, we observed that T-0901317 increased expression of ATP binding cassette A1 in the lesions in LDLR(-/-) mice as well as in mouse peritoneal macrophages. T-0901317 also significantly induced cholesterol efflux activity in peritoneal macrophages. These results suggest that LXR ligands may be useful therapeutic agents for the treatment of atherosclerosis.  相似文献   

18.
In this investigation the membrane-perturbing effect of filipin, a polyene antibiotic which reacts specifically with cholesterol or cholesterol-like compounds in cell membranes, has been exploited to study the distribution of coated pits in cultured human skin fibroblasts. The coated pits, showing no filipin-cholesterol complexes, occurred singly or in clusters without apparent localization of either type to a particular region of the fibroblast membrane. Colloidal gold, conjugated to low-density lipoprotein, has proven to be an excellent marker, allowing the localization of low-density lipoprotein receptors on the surface of cultured cells. A pattern similar to that for the coated pits in the plasma membrane fracture faces was observed in the distribution of gold-low-density lipoprotein conjugates in surface replicas, indicating that the low-density lipoprotein receptors are associated with these coated pits. It was shown that there is an apparent heterogeneity in the distribution of low-density lipoprotein receptors, from cell to cell and even among different areas of the same cell membrane. The binding capacity for gold-low-density lipoprotein complexes, as represented by the extent of surface labeling, was directly related to the cell variety within the culture or to the particular experimental procedure. The observation of differences in the distribution of gold-low-density lipoprotein conjugates, even among adjacent coated pits, provides evidence for various stages of activity of the low-density lipoprotein receptors corresponding to incorporation, mobility, and internalization.  相似文献   

19.
125I-labeled and ferritin-labeled low density lipoprotein (LDL) were used as visual probes to study the surface distribution of LDL receptors and to examine the mechanism of the endocytosis of this lipoprotein in cultured human fibrobasts. Light microscopic autoradiograms of whole cells incubated with 125I-LDL at 4 degrees C showed that LDL receptors were widely but unevenly distributed over the cell surface. With the electron microscope, we determined that 60-70% of the ferritin-labeled LDL that bound to cells at 4 degrees C was localized over short coated segments of the plasma membrane that accounted for no more than 2% of the total surface area. To study the internalization process, cells were first allowed to bind ferritin-labeled LDL at 4 degrees C and were then warmed to 37 degrees C. Within 10 min, nearly all the surface-bound LDL-ferritin was incorporated into coated endocytic vesicles that were formed by the invagination and pinching-off of the coated membrane regions that contained the receptor-bound LDL. With increasing time at 37 degrees C, these coated vesicles were observed sequentially to migrate through the cytoplasm (1 min), to lose their cytoplasmic coat (2 min), and to fuse with either primary or secondary lysosomes (6 min). The current data indicate that the coated regions of plasma membrane are specialized structures of rapid turnover that function to carry receptor-bound LDL, and perhaps other receptor-bound molecules, into the cell.  相似文献   

20.
Insulin stimulates the accumulation of iron by isolated fat cells by increasing the uptake of diferric transferrin. Analysis of the cell-surface binding of diferric 125I-transferrin indicated that insulin caused a 3-fold increase in the cell surface number of transferrin receptors. This result was confirmed by the demonstration that insulin increases the binding of an anti-rat transferrin receptor monoclonal antibody (OX-26) to the surface of fat cells. The basis of this effect of insulin was examined by investigating the number of transferrin receptors in membrane fractions isolated from disrupted fat cells. Two methods were employed. First the binding isotherm of diferric 125I-transferrin to the isolated membranes was studied. Second, the membranes were solubilized with detergent, and the number of transferrin receptors was measured by immunoblotting using the monoclonal antibody OX-26. It was observed that insulin treatment of intact fat cells resulted in an increase in the number of transferrin receptors located in the isolated plasma membrane fraction of the disrupted fat cells. Furthermore, the increase in the number of plasma membrane transferrin receptors was associated with a concomitant decrease in the transferrin receptor number in a low density microsome fraction previously shown to consist of intracellular membranes. This redistribution of transferrin receptors between cellular membrane fractions in response to insulin is remarkably similar to the regulation by insulin of glucose transporters and type II insulin-like growth factor receptors. We conclude that insulin stimulates fat cell iron uptake by a mechanism that may involve the redistribution of transferrin receptors from an internal membrane compartment (low density microsomes) to the cell surface (plasma membrane).  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号