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1.
Formation of macrophage-derived foam cells is a hallmark in earlier stages of atherosclerosis (AS). Increased cholesterol efflux from macrophage foam cells promote atherosclerotic regression. In the present study, lysophosphatidylcholine (LPC) promoting cholesterol efflux from macrophage foam cells was observed, and the mechanism underlying the action was investigated. Macrophage foam cells from mice were incubated with different concentrations of LPC (10, 20, 40, 80 microM), and the free cholesterol in medium increased but total intracellular cholesterol decreased. At the same time, the expression of PPARgamma, LXRalpha, ABCA1 was enhanced in a dose-dependent manner. The treatment of macrophage foam cells with 40 microM LPC for 12, 24 and 48 h promoted cellular cholesterol efflux in a time-dependent manner, meanwhile expression of PPARgamma, LXRalpha, ABCA1 was also raised respectively. Addition of different specific inhibitors of PPARgamma (GW9662), LXRalpha (GGPP), ABCA1 (DIDS) to the foam cells significantly suppressed LPC-induced cholesterol efflux. Also treatment with specific inhibitors of PPARgamma or LXRalpha decreased ABCA1 mRNA and protein expressions. LPC (40 microM)-induced cholesterol efflux was significantly lower in macrophage foam cells from apoE deficient mice than from normal C57BL/6J mice. In contrast, 10 microg apoAI-induced cholesterol efflux from foam cells remained in apoE deficient mice. The present results indicate that LPC promotes cholesterol efflux from macrophage foam cells via a PPARgamma-LXRalpha-ABCA1-dependent pathway. Furthermore, apoE may be involved in this process.  相似文献   

2.
M Saito  M Saito  A Rosenberg 《Biochemistry》1984,23(6):1043-1046
We have exposed cultured human fibroblasts to micromolar concentrations of the ionophore monensin. A salient result was a rapid accumulation in these cells of glucosylceramide (glucocerebroside, GlcCer) and lactosylceramide (lactocerebroside, LacCer). When we incubated these cells with radioactively labeled galactose, GlcCer and LacCer became highly labeled. These results indicate that monensin greatly increases these simplest glycosphingolipids that are the precursor to the major plasma membrane glycosphingolipids. We observed, simultaneously, a decreased incorporation of labeled galactose into some more highly glycosylated neutral glycosphingolipids and sialoglycosphingolipids (gangliosides), and unlike GlcCer and LacCer, the cellular content of these more highly glycosylated compounds remained the same in the presence or absence of monensin. We have found that cultured Gaucher disease fibroblasts, with genetically impaired lysosomal glucocerebrosidase activity, accumulated even more GlcCer and LacCer than normal cells upon exposure to monensin. This finding shows that monensin affects biosynthesis rather than merely disrupting lysosomal degradation that is already deleted with respect to GlcCer in Gaucher disease cells. These results represent the first indication of an apparently remarkable effect of the monovalent ionophore, monensin, on plasma membrane glycosphingolipid biosynthesis. The evidence suggests a regulatory distinction between initial and higher intracellular glycosylation steps. Monensin does not diminish and may augment initial anabolic mono- and diglycosylations and also appears to inhibit higher glycosylations of glycosphingolipids.  相似文献   

3.
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   

4.
5.
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   

6.
The main antiatherogenic function of HDL is to promote the efflux of cholesterol from peripheral cells and transport it to the liver for excretion in a process termed reverse cholesterol transport. The aim of this study was to evaluate the cholesterol efflux capacity in low- and high-HDL subjects by utilizing monocytes and serum from 18 low-HDL and 15 high-HDL subjects. Low and high HDL levels were defined, respectively, as HDL < or =10(th) and HDL > or =90(th) Finnish age/sex-specific percentile. Cholesterol efflux from [(3)H]cholesterol-oleate-acetyl-LDL-loaded monocyte-derived macrophages to standard apolipoprotein A-I (apoA-I), HDL(2), and serum was measured. In addition, cholesterol efflux from acetyl-LDL-loaded human THP-1 macrophages to individual sera (0.5%) derived from the study subjects was evaluated. Cholesterol efflux to apoA-I, HDL(2), and serum from macrophage foam cells derived from low- and high-HDL subjects was similar. The relative ABCA1 and ABCG1 mRNA expression levels in unloaded macrophages, as well as their protein levels in loaded macrophage foam cells, were similar in the two study groups. Cholesterol efflux from THP-1 foam cells to serum recovered from high-HDL subjects was slightly higher than that to serum from low-HDL subjects (P = 0.046). Cholesterol efflux from THP-1 macrophages to serum from study subjects correlated with serum apoB (P = 0.033), apoA-I (P = 0.004), apoA-II (P < 0.0001), and the percentage of apoA-I present in the form of prebeta-HDL (P = 0.0001). Our data reveal that macrophages isolated from either low- or high-HDL subjects display similar cholesterol efflux capacity to exogenous acceptors. However, sera from low-HDL subjects have poorer cholesterol acceptor ability as compared with sera from high-HDL subjects.  相似文献   

7.
Macrophages in the vessel wall secrete high levels of apolipoprotein E (apoE). Cholesterol efflux from macrophages to apoE has been shown to decrease foam cell formation and prevent atherosclerosis. An apoE molecule can mediate cholesterol efflux from the macrophage that originally secreted it (autocrine effect) or from surrounding macrophages (paracrine effect). Traditional methodologies have not been able to separate these serial effects. The novel methodology presented here was developed to separate autocrine and paracrine effects by using a simple mathematical model to interpret the effects of dilution on apoE-mediated cholesterol efflux. Our results show that, at very dilute concentrations, the paracrine effect of apoE is not evident and the autocrine effect becomes the dominant mediator of efflux. However, at saturating concentrations, paracrine apoE causes 80–90% of the apoE-mediated cholesterol efflux, whereas autocrine apoE is responsible for the remaining 10–20%. These results suggest that the relative importance of autocrine and paracrine apoE depends on the size of the local distribution volume, a factor not considered in previous in vitro studies of apoE function. Furthermore, autocrine effects of apoE could be critical in the prevention of foam cell formation in vivo. This novel methodology may be applicable to other types of mixed autocrine/paracrine systems, such as signal transduction systems. autocrine/paracrine system; cholesterol acceptor; extracellular space; distribution volume  相似文献   

8.
The Th1-derived cytokine gamma interferon, IFN-gamma, is present within the microenvironment of an atheromatous lesion and likely contributes to lesion progression through macrophage activation. While the inflammatory effects of IFN-gamma are well known, the role of this cytokine in cholesterol metabolism in macrophage derived foam cells is unclear. In the present study, the incubation of foam cells with IFN-gamma resulted in the reduction of HDL(3)-mediated cholesterol efflux. The decrease in cholesterol efflux was not observed with other macrophage-activating factors as colony-stimulating factors failed to demonstrate a similar effect. The reduction in cholesterol efflux was independent of apoE synthesis or SR-BI expression and was associated with a redistribution of intracellular cholesterol with an increase in cholesteryl ester accumulation. The increase in the esterified pool, primarily in cholesterol eicosapentadenoate, docosapentaenoate, arachidonate, and linoleate was associated with a 2-fold increase in acyl-CoA:cholesterol-O-acyltransferase, ACAT, activity and message without any change in neutral cholesteryl ester hydrolase activity. While CD36 message was reduced in IFN-gamma-treated foam cells, the ability to reverse the decrease in efflux by the ACAT inhibitor A58035 in a dose-dependent manner suggests that the IFN-gamma effect on efflux is primarily through the modulation of ACAT expression. Therefore, in addition to its inflammatory effects, IFN-gamma can contribute to the progression of an atherosclerotic lesion by altering the pathway of intracellular cholesterol trafficking in macrophage derived foam cells.  相似文献   

9.
ApoE plays an important role in lipoprotein metabolism. This study investigated the effects of adenovirus-mediated human apoE overexpression (AdhApoE3) on sterol metabolism and in vivo reverse cholesterol transport (RCT). In wild-type mice, AdhApoE3 resulted in decreased HDL cholesterol levels and a shift toward larger HDL in plasma, whereas hepatic cholesterol content increased (P < 0.05). These effects were dependent on scavenger receptor class B type I (SR-BI) as confirmed using SR-BI-deficient mice. Kinetic studies demonstrated increased plasma HDL cholesteryl ester catabolic rates (P < 0.05) and higher hepatic selective uptake of HDL cholesteryl esters in AdhApoE3-injected wild-type mice (P < 0.01). However, biliary and fecal sterol output as well as in vivo macrophage-to-feces RCT studied with (3)H-cholesterol-loaded mouse macrophage foam cells remained unchanged upon human apoE overexpression. Similar results were obtained using hApoE3 overexpression in human CETP transgenic mice. However, blocking ABCA1-mediated cholesterol efflux from hepatocytes in AdhApoE3-injected mice using probucol increased biliary cholesterol secretion (P < 0.05), fecal neutral sterol excretion (P < 0.05), and in vivo RCT (P < 0.01), specifically within neutral sterols. These combined data demonstrate that systemic apoE overexpression increases i) SR-BI-mediated selective uptake into the liver and ii) ABCA1-mediated efflux of RCT-relevant cholesterol from hepatocytes back to the plasma compartment, thereby resulting in unchanged fecal mass sterol excretion and overall in vivo RCT.  相似文献   

10.
Matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) have been suggested to function in remodeling of the arterial wall, but no information is available on their possible role in early atherogenesis, when cholesterol accumulates in the cells of the arterial intima, forming foam cells. Here, we incubated the major component responsible for efflux of cholesterol from foam cells, high density lipoprotein 3 (HDL(3)), with MMP-1, -3, -7, -9, or -12 at 37 degrees C before adding it to cholesterol-loaded human monocyte-derived macrophages. After incubation with MMP-3, -7, or -12, the ability of HDL(3) to induce the high affinity component of cholesterol efflux from the macrophage foam cells was strongly reduced, whereas preincubation with MMP-1 reduced cholesterol efflux only slightly and preincubation with MMP-9 had no effect. These differential effects of the various MMPs were reflected in their differential abilities to degrade the small pre-beta migrating particles present in the HDL(3) fraction. NH(2)-terminal sequence and mass spectrometric analyses of the apolipoprotein (apo) A-I fragments generated by MMPs revealed that those MMPs that strongly reduced cholesterol efflux (MMPs-3, -7, and -12) cleaved the COOH-terminal region of apoA-I and produced a major fragment of about 22 kDa, whereas MMPs-1 and -9, which had little and no effect on cholesterol efflux, degraded apoA-I only slightly and not at all, respectively. These results show, for the first time, that some members of the MMP family can degrade the apoA-I of HDL(3), so blocking cholesterol efflux from macrophage foam cells. This expansion of the substrate repertoire of MMPs to include apoA suggests that these proteinases are directly involved in the accumulation of cholesterol in atherosclerotic lesions.  相似文献   

11.
ApoE synthesis and secretion, as a function of cellular cholesterol content and cholesterol efflux, was studied in thioglycolate-elicited mouse peritoneal macrophages. As expected, loading elicited macrophages with cholesterol induced a 5-fold increase in apoE secretion and a 2.5-fold increase in cellular apoE content over a 5-h period. Treatment of cholesterol-loaded cells with HDL3 further increased apoE secretion 1.7-fold and decreased cellular cholesterol by 20%. Treatment of cholesterol-loaded cells with HDL3 and SAH 58.035 (an ACAT inhibitor) increased apoE secretion 2.4-fold and decreased cellular cholesterol content by 35%. Treatment of the cells with the ACAT inhibitor alone suppressed apoE secretion by 40% but did not change cellular cholesterol content. Northern blot analysis of RNA indicated that cholesterol loading increased apoE mRNA 2-fold. ApoE mRNA levels were not further affected by treatment with HDL3 and/or the ACAT inhibitor. Cholesterol-loaded cells, in the absence of HDL3, secreted apoE into the media in two fractions as determined by column chromatography: a large molecular weight complex, (larger than HDL), and an essentially lipid-free protein. In the presence of HDL3, the cells secreted apoE in three fractions: a large molecular weight complex, an essentially lipid-free protein, and over 50% of apoE associated with HDL. In the process, HDL3 became larger and eluted in a position identical to that of HDL2. A small amount of HDL3-derived material was also transformed to an LDL-size particle. Incubation of HDL3 in the absence of cholesterol-loaded cells did not produce these changes. It is concluded that cholesterol-loading increases apoE mRNA content and apoE synthesis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
Arterial intima contains metabolically active factors such as proteases, which may act on high-density lipoprotein (HDL) and impair its ability to accept cholesterol. In this study we treated human HDL(3) with human plasmin and human plasma kallikrein, two proteases also found in the human arterial intima, in order to study their effect on the ability of HDL(3) to promote cholesterol efflux from human macrophage foam cells. After exposure to plasmin or plasma kallikrein for 15 min, HDL(3) showed a decrease of about 60% in its ability to promote cholesterol efflux from the macrophage foam cells. SDS-PAGE analysis of the degraded HDL(3) particles showed that plasmin had generated cleavage products less than 15 kDa in size and plasma kallikrein had generated a major product of about 19 kDa. However, there was only a slight loss of intact apolipoproteins, suggesting degradation of a small subpopulation of HDL(3) particles. Agarose gel electrophoresis showed that a decrease in cholesterol efflux was accompanied by total loss of the HDL(3) with prebeta-mobility, but no apparent change in those with alpha mobility. These results suggest that the presence of active plasmin or plasma kallikrein in the atherosclerotic arterial intima promotes atherogenesis by blocking cholesterol efflux from macrophage foam cells.  相似文献   

13.
In vitro experiments have demonstrated that exogenous phospholipid transfer protein (PLTP), i.e. purified PLTP added to macrophage cultures, influences ABCA1-mediated cholesterol efflux from macrophages to HDL. To investigate whether PLTP produced by the macrophages (i.e., endogenous PLTP) is also part of this process, we used peritoneal macrophages derived from PLTP-knockout (KO) and wild-type (WT) mice. The macrophages were transformed to foam cells by cholesterol loading, and this resulted in the upregulation of ABCA1. Such macrophage foam cells from PLTP-KO mice released less cholesterol to lipid-free apolipoprotein A-I (apoA-I) and to HDL than did the corresponding WT foam cells. Also, when plasma from either WT or PLTP-KO mice was used as an acceptor, cholesterol efflux from PLTP-KO foam cells was less efficient than that from WT foam cells. After cAMP treatment, which upregulated the expression of ABCA1, cholesterol efflux from PLTP-KO foam cells to apoA-I increased markedly and reached a level similar to that observed in cAMP-treated WT foam cells, restoring the decreased cholesterol efflux associated with PLTP deficiency. These results indicate that endogenous PLTP produced by macrophages contributes to the optimal function of the ABCA1-mediated cholesterol efflux-promoting machinery in these cells. Whether macrophage PLTP acts at the plasma membrane or intracellularly or shuttles between these compartments needs further study.  相似文献   

14.
Reduction of the lipid burden of atherosclerotic lesion-associated macrophage foam cells is a logical strategy to reduce the plaque volume. Since extracellular cholesterol acceptor-mediated cholesterol efflux is the only recognized mechanism of cholesterol removal from foam cells and this process is rate limited at the level of intracellular cholesterol ester hydrolysis, a reaction catalyzed by neutral cholesteryl ester hydrolase (CEH), we examined the hypothesis that CEH overexpression in the human macrophage monocyte/macrophage cell line THP1 results in increased cholesterol efflux, as well as decreased cellular cholesterol ester accumulation. We generated THP1-CEH cells with stable integration of human macrophage CEH cDNA driven by the cytomegalovirus promoter. Compared with wild-type THP1 cells (THP1-WT), THP1-CEH cells showed increased CEH mRNA expression and increased CEH activity. Efflux of free or unesterified cholesterol by acetylated LDL-loaded THP1-CEH cells to ApoA-I by an ABCA1-dependent pathway or to HDL by an ABCG1-dependent pathway was significantly higher than that in THP1-WT cells. In addition, THP1-CEH cells accumulated significantly lower amount of esterified cholesterol. CEH overexpression, therefore, not only enhances cholesterol efflux but also reduces cellular accumulation of cholesteryl esters. Taken together, these data provide evidence for evaluating CEH expression in human macrophages as a potential target for attenuation of foam cell formation and regression of atherosclerotic plaques. lipoproteins; lipid burden; foam cells  相似文献   

15.
An important event in cholesterol metabolism is the efflux of cellular cholesterol by apolipoprotein A-I (apoA-I), the major protein of high density lipoproteins (HDL). Lipid-free apoA-I is the preferred substrate for ATP-binding cassette A1, which promotes cholesterol efflux from macrophage foam cells in the arterial wall. However, the vast majority of apoA-I in plasma is associated with HDL, and the mechanisms for the generation of lipid-free apoA-I remain poorly understood. In the current study, we used fluorescently labeled apoA-I that exhibits a distinct fluorescence emission spectrum when in different states of lipid association to establish the kinetics of apoA-I transition between the lipid-associated and lipid-free states. This approach characterized the spontaneous and rapid exchange of apoA-I between the lipid-associated and lipid-free states. In contrast, the kinetics of apoA-I exchange were significantly reduced when apoA-I on HDL was cross-linked with a bi-functional reagent or oxidized by myeloperoxidase. Our observations support the hypothesis that oxidative damage to apoA-I by myeloperoxidase limits the ability of apoA-I to be liberated in a lipid-free form from HDL. This impairment of apoA-I exchange reaction may be a trait of dysfunctional HDL contributing to reduced ATP-binding cassette A1-mediated cholesterol efflux and atherosclerosis.  相似文献   

16.
A recent study demonstrated that Cu(2+)-mediated oxidation of high density lipoprotein (HDL) resulted in a loss of the capacity to reduce cholesterol from macrophage foam cells [(1991) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 88, 6457-6461]. In the present study we characterized the physicochemical properties of oxidized HDL and correlated them with the ligand activity toward the HDL receptor. Among them, the cross-linking of apolipoproteins and an increase in lipid peroxides were characteristic and closely similar to those of tetranitromethane-treated HDL, an abortive ligand for the HDL receptor. Cellular experiments with murine peritoneal macrophages revealed that both the cellular binding activity of HDL and its capacity to enhance cholesterol efflux from macrophage foam cells were markedly reduced upon oxidation. These results suggest that cross-linking of HDL apolipoproteins is involved in the loss of the ligand activity of oxidized HDL.  相似文献   

17.
The content of glycosphingolipids (GSL) was studied in the urinary sediments (24-hr specimens) from seven normal subjects, a patient with Fabry's disease, and five homozygotes with familial hypercholesterolemia (FH). Normal urinary sediments contained very small amounts of GalCer, GlcCer, GaOse(2)Cer, LacCer, GbOse(3)Cer, and GbOse(4)Cer. In Fabry urinary sediment, the levels (nmole glucose/24 hr) of GaOse(2)Cer and of GbOse(3)Cer were 389 and 550, respectively. In urinary sediments from the FH subjects, the mean contents (nmol glucose/mg protein per 24 hr) of GlcCer, GalCer, and LacCer were 2.7, 1.9, and 15.8 times higher, respectively, than in normals. The mean contents ( micro g/mg protein per 24 hr) of total cholesterol and phospholipid in the urinary sediment of FH (1.1 and 224, respectively) and normals (0.8 and 220) were similar. The mean contents of GlcCer, GalCer, and LacCer, expressed in terms of the cholesterol content of urinary sediment (nmol glucose/ micro g cholesterol per 24 hr), were increased 3.4-, 1.6-, and 5.4-fold, respectively, in the FH homozygotes. Of the five FH homozygotes, only one, who had undergone a portacaval shunt and was also receiving lipid-lowering therapy, had a normal value of LacCer. The other four FH homozygotes had levels of LacCer that were 3- to 55-fold higher (nmol glucose/mg protein per 24 hr) and 5.5- to 7.3-fold higher (nmol glucose/ micro g cholesterol per 24 hr) than the mean of the normals. One homozygote underwent plasma exchange therapy that reduced both the baseline urinary (nmol glucose/24 hr) and plasma (nmol/100 ml) LacCer levels from 86 to 7 and from 1491 to 852, respectively. Eleven days after plasma exchange, the urinary LacCer levels approached pre-exchange levels (59 nmol glucose/24 hr). The data indicate that there is an abnormality of GSL metabolism associated with familial hyper-cholesterolemia and that the urinary excretion of GSL can be modified by plasma exchange therapy.-Chatterjee, S., C. S. Sekerke, and P. O. Kwiterovich, Jr. Increased urinary excretion of glycosphingolipids in familial hypercholesterolemia.  相似文献   

18.
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   

19.
The subcellular fate of glucosylceramide (GlcCer) formed from exogenous lactosylceramide (LacCer) in rat liver is investigated. LacCer radiolabeled on different positions of the molecule was intravenously administered to rats as a liposomal dispersion. A Golgi apparatus fraction 140-fold enriched in specific markers and constituted by intact cisternal stacks, as well as the lysosomal and plasma membrane fractions concurrently prepared from the same homogenate, were then studied in order to determine the time course of radioactive glycosphingolipids. LacCer quickly decreased with time in the plasma membrane, whereas in the lysosomes it increased up to 4 h and decreased thereafter. In both fractions results were regardless of the labeling position. In the Golgi apparatus, LacCer increased up to 12 h and then decreased. In this fraction, the radioactivity values of [Glc-3H]LacCer were over twice those of [Gal-3H]LacCer. GlcCer was found only after [Glc-3H]LacCer administration. In the lysosomes, its time course provided a peak similar in shape but delayed in timing with respect to that of LacCer. Conversely, in the Golgi apparatus GlcCer was earlier formed, but earlier consumed, than LacCer. Gangliosides increased in the Golgi apparatus until 4 h and then decreased after 12 h, whereas in the plasma membrane they were progressively accumulated. In both fractions the amount of [Glc-3H]gangliosides was over twice that of [Gal-3H]gangliosides was over twice that of [Gal-3H]gangliosides. Since we demonstrated that the sugars released in the course of LacCer degradation (LacCer----galactose + GlcCer----glucose + ceramide) are not incorporated into glycoconjugates, we conclude that a part of GlcCer formed during the lysosomal degradation of LacCer actually reaches the Golgi apparatus where it undergoes successive glycosylation.  相似文献   

20.
Phospholipid transfer protein (PLTP) is expressed by macrophage-derived foam cells in human atherosclerotic lesions, suggesting a regulatory role for PLTP in cellular cholesterol homeostasis. However, the exact role of PLTP in the reverse cholesterol transport pathway is not known. PLTP is present in plasma as two forms, a highly active (HA-PLTP) and a lowly active (LA-PLTP) form. In this study we clarify the role of the two forms of PLTP in cholesterol efflux from [3H]cholesterol oleate-acetyl-LDL-loaded THP-1 macrophages. Incubation of HDL in the presence of HA-PLTP resulted in the formation of two types of acceptor particles, prebeta-HDL and large fused HDL. HA-PLTP increased prebeta-HDL formation and caused a 42% increase in [3H]cholesterol efflux to HDL, while LA-PLTP neither formed prebeta-HDL nor increased cholesterol efflux. Removal of the formed prebeta-HDL by immunoprecipitation decreased cholesterol efflux by 47%. Neither HA- nor LA-PLTP enhanced cholesterol efflux to lipid-free apoA-I. Importantly, also the large fused HDL particles formed during incubation of HDL with HA-PLTP acted as efficient cholesterol acceptors. These observations demonstrate that only HA-PLTP increases macrophage cholesterol efflux, via formation of efficient cholesterol acceptors, prebeta-HDL and large fused HDL particles.  相似文献   

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