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1.
Pregnenolone (PREG) can be converted to PREG esters (PE) by the plasma enzyme lecithin: cholesterol acyltransferase (LCAT), and by other enzyme(s) with unknown identity. Acyl-CoA:cholesterol acyltransferase 1 and 2 (ACAT1 and ACAT2) convert various sterols to steryl esters; their activities are activated by cholesterol. PREG is a sterol-like molecule, with 3-β-hydroxy moiety at steroid ring A, but with much shorter side chain at steroid ring D. Here we show that without cholesterol, PREG is a poor ACAT substrate; with cholesterol, the V(max) for PREG esterification increases by 100-fold. The binding affinity of ACAT1 for PREG is 30-50-fold stronger than that for cholesterol; however, PREG is only a substrate but not an activator, while cholesterol is both a substrate and an activator. These results indicate that the sterol substrate site in ACAT1 does not involve significant sterol-phospholipid interaction, while the sterol activator site does. Studies utilizing small molecule ACAT inhibitors show that ACAT plays a key role in PREG esterification in various cell types examined. Mice lacking ACAT1 or ACAT2 do not have decreased PREG ester contents in adrenals, nor do they have altered levels of the three major secreted adrenal steroids in serum. Mice lacking LCAT have decreased levels of PREG esters in the adrenals. These results suggest LCAT along with ACAT1/ACAT2 contribute to control pregnenolone ester content in different cell types and tissues.  相似文献   

2.
The capacity of acyl-CoA:cholesterol O-acyltransferase (ACAT) 2 to differentiate cholesterol from the plant sterol, sitosterol, was compared with that of the sterol esterifying enzymes, ACAT1 and lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase (LCAT). Cholesterol-loaded microsomes from transfected cells containing either ACAT1 or ACAT2 exhibited significantly more ACAT activity than their sitosterol-loaded counterparts. In sitosterol-loaded microsomes, both ACAT1 and ACAT2 were able to esterify sitosterol albeit with lower efficiencies than cholesterol. The mass ratios of cholesterol ester to sitosterol ester formed by ACAT1 and ACAT2 were 1.6 and 7.2, respectively. Compared with ACAT1, ACAT2 selectively esterified cholesterol even when sitosterol was loaded into the microsomes. To further characterize the difference in sterol specificity, ACAT1 and ACAT2 were compared in intact cells loaded with either cholesterol or sitosterol. Despite a lower level of ACAT activity, the ACAT1-expressing cells esterified 4-fold more sitosterol than the ACAT2 cells. The data showed that compared with ACAT1, ACAT2 displayed significantly greater selectively for cholesterol compared with sitosterol. The plasma cholesterol esterification enzyme lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase was also compared. With recombinant high density lipoprotein particles, the esterification rate of cholesterol by LCAT was only 15% greater than for sitosterol. Thus, LCAT was able to efficiently esterify both cholesterol and sitosterol. In contrast, ACAT2 demonstrated a strong preference for cholesterol rather than sitosterol. This sterol selectivity by ACAT2 may reflect a role in the sorting of dietary sterols during their absorption by the intestine in vivo.  相似文献   

3.
Rabbits were fed either 10% coconut oil, 10% coconut oil and 1% beta-sitosterol, 10% coconut oil and 1% cholesterol, or 10% coconut oil and 1% beta-sitosterol plus 1% cholesterol for 4 weeks. Microsomal membranes from intestines of animals fed the 1% beta-sitosterol diet had 48% less cholesterol and were enriched twofold in beta-sitosterol compared to membranes from animals fed the coconut oil diet alone. Acylcoenzyme A:cholesterol acyltransferase (ACAT) activity in jejunum and ileum was decreased significantly in animals fed the plant sterol alone. In membranes from animals fed 1% beta-sitosterol and 1% cholesterol, beta-sitosterol content increased 50% whereas cholesterol was modestly decreased compared to their controls fed only cholesterol. Intestinal ACAT was unchanged in the animals fed both sterols when compared to their controls. beta-Sitosterol esterification was determined by incubating intestinal microsomal membranes with either [(14)C]beta-sitosterol-albumin emulsion or [(14)C]beta-sitosterol:dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine (DPPC) liposomes to radiolabel the endogenous sterol pool. Oleoyl-CoA was then added. The CoA-dependent esterification rate of beta-sitosterol was very slow compared to that of cholesterol using both techniques. An increased amount of endogenous microsomal beta-sitosterol, which occurs in animals fed 1% beta-sitosterol, did not interfere with the stimulation of ACAT activity secondary to cholesterol enrichment of the membranes. Enriching microsomal membranes three- to five-fold with beta-sitosterol did not affect ACAT activity. Freshly isolated intestinal cells were incubated for 1 hour with [(3)H]oleic acid and beta-sitosterol:DPPC or 25-hydroxycholesterol:DPPC. Incorporation of oleic acid into cholesteryl esters did not change in the presence of beta-sitosterol but increased fourfold after the addition of 25-hydroxycholesterol. We conclude that the CoA-dependent esterification rate of cholesterol is at least 60 times greater than that of beta-sitosterol. Membrane beta-sitosterol does not interfere with nor compete with cholesterol esterification. Inadequate esterification of this plant sterol may play a role in the poor absorption of beta-sitosterol by the gut.-Field, F. J., and S. N. Mathur. beta-Sitosterol: esterification by intestinal acylcoenzyme A:cholesterol acyltransferase (ACAT) and its effect on cholesterol esterification.  相似文献   

4.
We compared the abilities of cholesterol versus various oxysterols as substrate and/or as activator for the enzyme acyl-coenzyme A:cholesterol acyltransferase (ACAT), by monitoring the activity of purified human ACAT1 in response to sterols solubilized in mixed micelles or in reconstituted vesicles. The results showed that 5 alpha,6 alpha-epoxycholesterol and 7 alpha-hydroxycholesterol are comparable with cholesterol as the favored substrates, whereas 7-ketocholesterol, 7 beta-hydroxycholesterol, 5 beta,6 beta-epoxycholesterol, and 24(S),25-epoxycholesterol are very poor substrates for the enzyme. We then tested the ability of 7-ketocholesterol as an activator when cholesterol was measured as the substrate, and vice versa. When cholesterol was measured as the substrate, the addition of 7-ketocholesterol could not activate the enzyme. In contrast, when 7-ketocholesterol was measured as the substrate, the addition of cholesterol significantly activated the enzyme and changed the shape of the substrate saturation curve from sigmoidal to essentially hyperbolic. Additional results show that, as an activator, cholesterol is much better than all the oxysterols tested. These results suggest that ACAT1 contains two types of sterol binding sites; the structural requirement for the ACAT activator site is more stringent than it is for the ACAT substrate site. Upon activation by cholesterol, ACAT1 becomes promiscuous toward various sterols as its substrate.  相似文献   

5.
The enzymatic activity and sterol substrate specificity of acyl coenzyme A:cholesterol acyltransferase (ACAT) were measured in microsomes of cells from Heliothis zea. Under standard assay conditions, the specific enzymatic activity of ACAT was highest in the intestine followed by the fat body and ovary (380.7, 30.7, 8.3 pmol/min per mg, respectively). The structure of the exogenous sterol used in the ACAT assay affected its rate of esterification. The relative rates of esterification of analogs of cholesterol with various modifications of the side chain were: 24-H greater than 24 alpha-CH3 greater than delta 22 greater than delta 24 greater than 24 alpha-C2H5 greater than 24 beta-CH3, delta 22-24 beta-CH3 and delta 22-24 alpha-C2H5. The number and position of double bonds in the B-ring of the sterol nucleus greatly affected the rate of esterification of sterols by ACAT. The average relative rates of esterification of sterols with differences in their B-rings were: delta 7 much greater than delta 8 greater than delta 0 greater than delta 5 greater than delta 5.7. The presence of a 9,14-cyclopropane group and/or methyl groups at the C-4 and 14 positions prevented significant esterification of such sterols. The formation of cholesteryl and lathosteryl esters was partially inhibited in microsomes from the intestine, fat body, and ovary by the addition of the ACAT inhibitor, 3-(decyldimethylsilyl)-N-[2-(4-methylphenyl)-1-phenylethyl]prop anamide (Sandoz Compound 58-035).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

6.
Two enzymes are responsible for cholesterol ester formation in tissues, acyl coenzyme A:cholesterol acyltransferase types 1 and 2 (ACAT1 and ACAT2). The available evidence suggests different cell locations, membrane orientations, and metabolic functions for each enzyme. ACAT1 and ACAT2 gene disruption experiments in mice have shown complementary results, with ACAT1 being responsible for cholesterol homeostasis in the brain, skin, adrenal, and macrophages. ACAT1 -/- mice have less atherosclerosis than their ACAT1 +/+ counterparts, presumably because of the decreased ACAT activity in the macrophages. By contrast, ACAT2 -/- mice have limited cholesterol absorption in the intestine, and decreased cholesterol ester content in the liver and plasma lipoproteins. Almost no cholesterol esterification was found when liver and intestinal microsomes from ACAT2 -/- mice were assayed. Studies in non-human primates have shown the presence of ACAT1 primarily in the Kupffer cells of the liver, in non-mucosal cell types in the intestine, and in kidney and adrenal cortical cells, whereas ACAT2 is present only in hepatocytes and in intestinal mucosal cells. The membrane topology for ACAT1 and ACAT2 is also apparently different, with ACAT1 having a serine essential for activity on the cytoplasmic side of the endoplasmic reticulum membrane, whereas the analogous serine is present on the lumenal side of the endoplasmic reticulum for ACAT2. Taken together, the data suggest that cholesterol ester formation by ACAT1 supports separate functions compared with cholesterol esterification by ACAT2. The latter enzyme appears to be responsible for cholesterol ester formation and secretion in lipoproteins, whereas ACAT1 appears to function to maintain appropriate cholesterol availability in cell membranes.  相似文献   

7.
The regulation of acylcoenzyme A:cholesterol acyltransferase (ACAT) activity by cholesterol was studied in an established enterocyte cell line. CaCo-2 cells were grown in culture to confluency and dome formation. They were characterized morphologically by light and transmission electron microscopy. During the culture period, ACAT activity remained stable while the activities of the brush border enzymes sucrase and alkaline phosphatase progressively increased with time and plateaued 12 days after plating. As determined by the rate of incorporation of oleic acid into the individual lipid classes, the rate of triglyceride synthesis was twice that of phospholipid and 15 times that of cholesteryl ester synthesis in these cells. Incubating CaCo-2 cells with cholesterol solubilized in taurocholate micelles resulted in a significant increase in ACAT activity (149 +/- 5 pmol/dish per 2 hr vs. 366 +/- 5, (P less than 0.001) without changing the rates of triglyceride or phospholipid synthesis. The stimulation of ACAT activity by micellar cholesterol was rapid, occurring within 5 min and reaching a maximal effect by 2 hr. The regulation of ACAT activity by cholesterol was directly dependent upon the concentration of cholesterol solubilized in the micelle and was independent of protein synthesis. Incubating CaCo-2 cells with micellar cholesterol did not increase the esterification of, nor did the cholesterol enter the pool of, newly synthesized or performed cholesterol within 2 hr. The micellar cholesterol that was taken up by the cells was esterified within 5 min after starting the incubation. Progesterone, a known ACAT inhibitor, significantly decreased the rate of esterification of intracellular micellar cholesterol proving that the cholesterol taken up by CaCo-2 cells was indeed entering the ACAT pool. Despite increasing amounts of unesterified cholesterol entering the cells via micelles, the percent of cholesterol that was esterified at any one time remained constant at 1%. The results suggest that ACAT activity in CaCo-2 cells is stimulated by cholesterol delivered to the cells by way of taurocholate micelles. The rapid entry of this sterol into the ACAT substrate pool suggests that ACAT activity in CaCo-2 cells is regulated by the expansion of the cholesterol substrate pool that is being utilized by an unsaturated ACAT enzyme.  相似文献   

8.
Acyl coenzyme A:cholesterol acyltransferase (ACAT), the enzyme catalyzing the hepatic cholesterol esterification could be involved in the modified availability of cholesterol detectable in proliferating systems. While no significant variations are detectable in the regenerating liver, the modified ACAT activity during liver development and its differential sensitivity to the in vitro stimulation of modulatory systems suggest an involvement of the enzyme in this proliferating process.  相似文献   

9.
The metabolic fate of newly absorbed cholesterol and phytosterol is orchestrated through adenosine triphosphate-binding cassette transporter G5 and G8 heterodimer (G5G8), and acyl CoA:cholesterol acyltransferase 2 (ACAT2). We hypothesized that intestinal G5G8 limits sterol absorption by reducing substrate availability for ACAT2 esterification and have attempted to define the roles of these two factors using gene deletion studies in mice. Male ACAT2(-/-), G5G8(-/-), ACAT2(-/-)G5G8(-/-) (DKO), and wild-type (WT) control mice were fed a diet with 20% of energy as palm oil and 0.2% (w/w) cholesterol. Sterol absorption efficiency was directly measured by monitoring the appearance of [(3)H]sitosterol and [(14)C]cholesterol tracers in lymph after thoracic lymph duct cannulation. The average percentage (± SEM) absorption of [(14)C]cholesterol after 8 h of lymph collection was 40.55 ± 0.76%, 19.41 ± 1.52%, 32.13 ± 1.60%, and 21.27 ± 1.35% for WT, ACAT2(-/-), G5G8(-/-), and DKO mice, respectively. [(3)H]sitosterol absorption was <2% in WT and ACAT2(-/-) mice, whereas it was up to 6.8% in G5G8(-/-) and DKO mice. G5G8(-/-) mice also produced chylomicrons with ~70% less cholesterol ester mass than WT mice. In contrast to expectations, the data demonstrated that the absence of G5G8 led to decreased intestinal cholesterol esterification and reduced cholesterol transport efficiency. Intestinal G5G8 appeared to limit the absorption of phytosterols; ACAT2 more efficiently esterified cholesterol than phytosterols. The data indicate that handling of sterols by the intestine involves both G5G8 and ACAT2 but that an additional factor (possibly Niemann-Pick C1-like 1) may be key in determining absorption efficiency.  相似文献   

10.
11.
Acyl-CoA:cholesterol O-acyltransferase (EC 2.3.1.26, ACAT) is the major intracellular cholesterol-esterifying activity in vascular tissue and is potentially a key regulator of intracellular cholesterol homeostasis during atherogenesis. We have previously reported inhibition of microsomal ACAT by histidine and sulfhydryl-selective chemical modification reagents and present here a more detailed analysis of the effect of sulfhydryl modification on ACAT activity. This analysis indicated two effects of sulfhydryl modification on ACAT activity. Modification of aortic microsomes with relatively low concentrations of p-mercuribenzoate (PMB) (100-200 microM) identified an inhibitory coenzyme A binding site on ACAT which contains a modifiable sulfhydryl group. This site binds CoA tightly (Ki = 20 microM), and PMB modification prevented subsequent ACAT inhibition by CoA without itself inhibiting enzyme activity. At higher concentrations (1-2 mM), PMB inhibited ACAT activity, indicating the presence of a modifiable sulfhydryl group necessary for cholesterol esterification by ACAT. Modification of both sites by PMB was reversible by thiols, and protection against modification was afforded in both cases by oleoyl-CoA, indicating that these sites may also bind oleoyl-CoA. Thus, at least two sulfhydryl groups influence ACAT activity: one is necessary for cholesterol esterification by ACAT, and one is at or near an inhibitory CoA binding site, which may be occupied at intracellular concentrations of CoA.  相似文献   

12.
Cholesteryl ester (CE) accumulation in arterial wall macrophages (foam cells), mediated by the intracellular enzyme acyl coenzyme A:cholesterol acyl transferase (ACAT), is a prominent feature of atherosclerotic lesions. However, native low density lipoprotein (LDL) does not cause activation of ACAT or CE accumulation in cultured mouse peritoneal macrophages despite both substantial LDL uptake and degradation and the presence of ACAT in these cells. We now report that when protein synthesis is inhibited in mouse peritoneal macrophages by treatment with cycloheximide, puromycin, or actinomycin D, native LDL-induced whole-cell ACAT activity and CE accumulation is 10-fold higher than that seen in LDL-treated control cells. The enhancement of ACAT activity was seen 4 h after the addition of cycloheximide, and ACAT activity returned to control values 4 h after the withdrawal of cycloheximide. Postnuclear supernatants and microsomes from cycloheximide-treated mouse peritoneal macrophages also had higher ACAT activity than microsomes from control cells, but the relative enhancement (maximum 3.3-fold) was less than that seen when ACAT was assayed in the intact cell. In contrast to the situation with mouse peritoneal macrophages, cycloheximide treatment of J774 macrophages, which under normal conditions display high ACAT activity and CE accumulation in the presence of native LDL, did not result in further enhancement of either ACAT activity or LDL-induced CE accumulation. From these data we postulate that mouse peritoneal macrophages have a short-lived protein that inhibits ACAT-mediated cholesterol esterification which is responsible for their lack of ACAT response and CE accumulation in the presence of native LDL. The explanation for high ACAT activity and LDL-induced CE accumulation in J774 macrophages may be that these cells lack the putative mouse peritoneal macrophage cholesterol esterification inhibitor.  相似文献   

13.
The acyl-CoA:cholesterol acyltransferase (ACAT) activity and lipid composition of hepatic microsomal membrane were investigated 6 weeks after both 50 and 75% distal-small-bowel resection (SBR). A significant decrease in hepatic cholesteryl ester levels was observed after SBR, with a significant increase in the cholesteryl ester content of the livers of 75% SBR compared with the 50% SBR. Hepatic total acylglycerols, free cholesterol and phospholipid levels were not modified after the surgical operation. Microsomal free cholesterol was increased after both 50 and 75% SBR. However, a decrease in both microsomal ACAT activity and cholesteryl ester levels were found in microsomes (microsomal fractions) of resected rats, both changes being higher after 75 than after 50% resection. The total phospholipid content of the microsomes did not change after the surgical operation. The microsomal phospholipid fatty acid composition indicated higher changes after 75 than after 50% SBR. These results demonstrated that, in resected animals: (1) the activity of the enzyme responsible for catalysing cholesterol esterification (ACAT) is decreased, and (2) hepatic microsomal free cholesterol does not appear to influence the activity of ACAT.  相似文献   

14.
We investigated the incorporation of radioactive precursors into cholesteryl ester in cultured glioblastoma cells. It was found that polar cholesterol derivatives and exogenous cholesterol contained in lipoprotein complexes greatly enhanced intracellular cholesteryl ester formation. The direct transfer of the acyl moiety from acyl-CoA to free cholesterol was demonstrated in broken cell preparations. Further evidence of the existence of the acyl-CoA:cholesterol acyltransferase (ACAT) in glioblastoma cells came from the conversion of radioactive cholesterol to cholesteryl ester by glial cell homogenates. The characteristics of the enzymic assay were studied in detail. This enzymic activity was greatly enhanced in homogenates prepared from 7-ketocholesterol-treated cells. Thus, cells more active in cholesterol esterification possessed a higher ACAT activity. Progesterone inhibited cholesterol esterification in cell-free preparations. The marked inhibition of intracellular cholesteryl ester formation in intact cells by progesterone is a strong argument for the exclusive role of ACAT in glioblastoma cells. Similar properties of cholesteryl ester biosynthesis have been observed in neuroblastoma cells and primary brain cell cultures. In conclusion, the same enzyme is involved in cholesteryl ester biosynthesis in all neural cells. Neural and nonneural cells share many fundamental characteristics of cholesteryl ester formation.  相似文献   

15.
Cholesterol- and cholesteryl ester-rich macrophage foam cells, characteristic of atherosclerotic lesions, are often generated in vitro using oxidized low density lipoprotein (OxLDL). However, relatively little is known of the nature and extent of sterol deposition in these cells or of its relationship to the foam cells formed in atherosclerotic lesions. The purpose of this study was to examine the content and cellular processing of sterols in OxLDL-loaded macrophages, and to compare this with macrophages loaded with acetylated LDL (AcLDL; cholesteryl ester-loaded cells containing no oxidized lipids) or 7-ketocholesterol-enriched acetylated LDL (7KCAcLDL; cholesteryl ester-loaded cells selectively supplemented with 7-ketocholesterol (7KC), the major oxysterol present in OxLDL). Both cholesterol and 7KC and their esters were measured in macrophages after uptake of these modified lipoproteins. Oxysterols comprised up to 50% of total sterol content of OxLDL-loaded cells. Unesterified 7KC and cholesterol partitioned into cell membranes, with no evidence of retention of either free sterol within lysosomes. The cells also contained cytosolic, ACAT-derived, cholesteryl and 7-ketocholesteryl esters. The proportion of free cholesterol and 7KC esterified by ACAT was 10-fold less in OxLDL-loaded cells than in AcLDL or 7KCAcLDL-loaded cells. This poor esterification rate in OxLDL-loaded cells was partly caused by fatty acid limitation. OxLDL-loaded macrophages also contained large (approximately 40-50% total cell sterol content) pools of oxidized esters, containing cholesterol or 7KC esterified to oxidized fatty acids. These were insensitive to ACAT inhibition, very stable and located in lysosomes, indicating resistance to lysosomal esterases. Macrophages loaded with OxLDL do not accumulate free sterols in their lysosomal compartment, but do accumulate lysosomal deposits of OxLDL-derived cholesterol and 7-ketocholesterol esterified to oxidized fatty acids. The presence of similar deposits in lesion foam cells would represent a pool of sterols that is particularly resistant to removal.  相似文献   

16.
17.
Esterification of endogenous cholesterol in human small intestinal mucosa by acyl-CoA:cholesterol acyltransferase (ACAT, EC 2.3.1.26) was studied using [1-14C]oleoyl-CoA as substrate. The reaction was linear for 2 min only. The esterification of cholesterol was stimulated by albumin, but this effect was dependent on the oleoyl-CoA concentration. When the albumin concentration was 5 g/liter, maximal esterification was obtained with 35 microM oleoyl-CoA. The pH optimum was 7.2-7.8. The ACAT specific activity was highest in microsomal preparations from jejunum (0.21 +/- 0.19 (n = 18) nmol cholesteryl oleate . mg microsomal protein-1 . min-1), and lower in proximal duodenum and distal ileum. Whole homogenates of biopsies had about 1/4 of the activity of the corresponding microsomal preparation. Microsomal preparations from jejunum contained acyl-CoA hydrolase (EC 3.1.2.2) which under the prevailing conditions had a maximal activity of 4.4 nmol oleate formed . microsomal protein-1 . min-1. The high activity of intestinal ACAT in man renders it possible that this enzyme plays a role in cholesterol absorption.  相似文献   

18.
The activity of acyl-CoA:cholesterol acyltransferase (ACAT; EC 2.3.1.26) was measured in fibroblast homogenates from Niemann-Pick Type C (NPC) and Type D (NPD) patients to determine whether these cells exhibit similar defects in the regulation of cholesterol esterification. ACAT activity in normal cells cultured in the absence of serum lipoproteins responded rapidly (within 6 h) to the addition of serum and reached peak levels at 12-24 h, whereas little stimulation of activity in NPC cells was observed. In contrast, ACAT activity in NPD fibroblasts (cell lines from four different patients) began to increase between 6 and 12 h after serum addition, reaching levels up to 50% of normal values at 24 h. ACAT activity in NPC and NPD cell extracts could not be stimulated by preincubation with normal cell homogenates, nor was complementation between NPC and NPD homogenates observed. Addition of 25-hydroxycholesterol to fibroblasts cultured in delipidated serum increased ACAT activity for all three cell types, although stimulation in NPD cells was less than that observed in NPC cells. ACAT activity of deoxycholate-solubilized homogenates reconstituted into phosphatidylcholine vesicles was independent of the presence of serum lipoproteins during culture and dependent on cholesterol present in the vesicles for all cell types. However, ACAT activities of mutant fibroblasts in vesicles plus cholesterol were significantly (about 40%) lower than control levels. These results suggest that the metabolic lesions in NPC and NPD cells are biochemically distinct and that both may involve factors in addition to the availability of cholesterol substrate for the ACAT enzyme.  相似文献   

19.
Hepatic and serum levels of cholesterol precursors were analyzed in rats under basal (control) conditions and when cholesterol synthesis was activated by feeding 1% squalene or 5% cholestyramine. Exogenous squalene stimulated the activity of acyl-coenzyme A:cholesterol acyltransferase (ACAT) but strongly inhibited the activity of hydroxymethylglutaryl-coenzyme A (HMG-CoA) reductase; cholestyramine did not affect ACAT but increased HMG-CoA reductase several-fold, indicating enhanced production of endogenous squalene. Activation of cholesterol synthesis by the two methods markedly increased the hepatic and serum contents of cholesterol precursor sterols. However, the sterol profiles were clearly different. Thus, exogenous squalene raised most significantly (up to 109-fold) free and esterified methyl sterols, and less so (up to 2-fold) demethylated C27 sterols (desmosterol and cholestenols) and also esterified cholesterol. Activation of endogenous squalene production by cholestyramine was associated with a depletion of esterified cholesterol and by a marked, up to 8-fold, increase of the free demethylated sterol precursor levels, whereas the increase of methyl sterols, up to 5-fold, was less conspicuous than during the squalene feeding. The changes were mostly insignificant for esterified sterols. The altered serum sterol profiles were quite similar to those in liver. Serum cholestenols and especially their portion of total serum precursor sterols were closely correlated with the hepatic activity of HMG-CoA reductase.  相似文献   

20.
Several studies indicate that cholesterol esterification is deregulated in cancers. The present study aimed to characterize the role of cholesterol esterification in proliferation and invasion of two tumor cells expressing an activated cholecystokinin 2 receptor (CCK2R). A significant increase in cholesterol esterification and activity of Acyl-CoA:cholesterol acyltransferase (ACAT) was measured in tumor cells expressing a constitutively activated oncogenic mutant of the CCK2R (CCK2R-E151A cells) compared with nontumor cells expressing the wild-type CCK2R (CCK2R-WT cells). Inhibition of cholesteryl ester formation and ACAT activity by Sah58-035, an inhibitor of ACAT, decreased by 34% and 73% CCK2R-E151A cell growth and invasion. Sustained activation of CCK2R-WT cells by gastrin increased cholesteryl ester production while addition of cholesteryl oleate to the culture medium of CCK2R-WT cells increased cell proliferation and invasion to a level close to that of CCK2R-E151A cells. In U87 glioma cells, a model of autocrine growth stimulation of the CCK2R, inhibition of cholesterol esterification and ACAT activity by Sah58-035 and two selective antagonists of the CCK2R significantly reduced cell proliferation and invasion. In both models, cholesteryl ester formation was found dependent on protein kinase zeta/ extracellular signal-related kinase 1/2 (PKCζ/ERK1/2) activation. These results show that signaling through ACAT/cholesterol esterification is a novel pathway for the CCK2R that contributes to tumor cell proliferation and invasion.  相似文献   

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