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1.
Whole serum obtained from hypercholesterolemic rhesus monkeys was found to stimulate cholesterol esterification and cholesteryl ester accumulation in rhesus monkey arterial smooth muscle cells in culture to a significantly greater extent than normocholesterolemic serum. This was true even when the cholesterol concentration of the culture medium was equalized. Isolation and characterzation of the low density lipoproteins (LDL) from rhesus monkeys indicated that the LDL from hypercholesterolemic animals was 33% larger than LDL from normocholesterolemic animals due principally to an increase in the amount of cholesteryl ester per molecule. As a result, LDL from hypercholesterolemic animals transported over 50% more cholesterol per molecule than did normal LDL. The LDL of altered composition from hypercholesterolemic animals, when added to smooth muscle cells in culture, was nearly twice as effective in stimulating cholesterol esterification and cholesteryl ester accumulation than was LDL of normal composition. Results suggest that at least part of the exaggerated ability of whole hypercholesterolemic serum to stimulate the esterification and accumulation of cholesterol in cells in culture is due to the presence of LDL of altered composition.  相似文献   

2.
Spontaneously hypercholesterolemic (SH) cynomolgus monkeys were identified that have average plasma cholesterol of 202 mg/dl, while that in normal monkeys is 119 mg/dl. The LDL from these SH monkeys have lower affinity for fibroblast LDL receptors in vitro. The amount of LDL2 (1.030 mean value of d 1.063 g/ml) required to displace 50% of [125I]LDL was 3.8 micrograms/ml for normal LDL2 and 6.6 micrograms/ml for SH-LDL2. The binding affinity of LDL1 (1.019 mean value of d 1.030 g/ml) was the same in normal and SH animals. LDL turnover experiments showed that the SH monkeys were comprised of two populations. Normal LDL2 was cleared much slower in two of the SH monkeys than in normocholesterolemic animals, suggesting that these two animals have an LDL receptor defect. However, LDL2 isolated from these two SH monkeys was cleared normally in normal monkeys. LDL2 isolated from two other SH monkeys is cleared slower than is normal LDL2 in normal animals, suggesting that these animals have an LDL defect. Thus, the hypercholesterolemia of these SH monkeys is associated with defective LDL catabolism; two animals appear to have functionally defective LDL receptors, and two animals appear to have functionally defective LDL.  相似文献   

3.
The mass efflux of free and esterified cholesterol was studied in skin fibroblasts loaded with cholesterol by incubation with low density lipoproteins (LDL) isolated from normal or hypercholesterolemic cynomolgus monkeys. Cells incubated with hypercholesterolemic LDL accumulated 2-3 times more cholesteryl ester than did cells incubated with the same amount of normal LDL. Cholesteryl oleate was the principal cholesteryl ester species to accumulate in cells incubated with both normal and hypercholesterolemic LDL. Efflux of this accumulated cholesterol was absolutely dependent on the presence of a cholesterol acceptor in the culture medium. Lipoprotein-deficient serum (LPDS) was the most potent promoter of cholesterol efflux tested, with maximum efflux occurring at LPDS concentrations greater than 1.5 mg protein/ml. Upon addition of efflux medium containing LPDS, there was a reduction in both the free and esterified cholesterol concentration of the cells. Greater than 90% of the cholesteryl esters that were lost from the cells appeared in the culture medium as free cholesterol, indicating that hydrolysis of cholesteryl esters preceded efflux. Efflux was not inhibited by chloroquine, however, suggesting a mechanism independent of lysosomes. Loss of cellular free cholesterol was maximum by 6 hr and changed very little thereafter up to 72 hr. Cholesteryl ester loss from cells decreased in a log linear fashion for efflux periods of 6-72 hr, with an average half-life for cholesteryl ester efflux of 30 hr, but with a range of 20-50 hr, depending upon the specific cell line. The rate of efflux of cellular cholesteryl esters was similar for cells loaded with normal or hypercholesterolemic LDL. In cells loaded with cholesteryl esters, cholesterol synthesis was suppressed and cholesterol esterification and fatty acid synthesis were enhanced. During efflux, cholesterol synthesis remained maximally suppressed while cholesterol esterification decreased for the first 24 hr of efflux, then plateaued at a level approximately 5-fold higher than control levels, while fatty acid synthesis was slightly stimulated. There was little difference in the rate of efflux of individual cholesteryl ester species. There was, however, the suggestion that reesterification of cholesterol principally to palmitic acid occurred during efflux. Since the rate of cellular cholesteryl ester efflux was similar regardless of whether the cells had been loaded with cholesterol by incubation with normal LDL or hypercholesterolemic LDL, the greater accumulation of cholesterol in cells incubated with hypercholesterolemic LDL cannot be explained by differences in rates of efflux.-St. Clair, R. W., and M. A. Leight. Cholesterol efflux from cells enriched with cholesteryl esters by incubation with hypercholesterolemic monkey low density lipoprotein.  相似文献   

4.
The profoundly elevated concentrations of low-density lipoproteins (LDL) present in homozygous familial hypercholesterolemia lead to symptomatic cardiovascular disease and death by early adulthood. Studies conducted in nonhepatic tissues demonstrated defective cellular recognition and metabolism of LDL in these patients. Since mammalian liver removes at least half of the LDL in the circulation, the metabolism of LDL by cultured hepatocytes isolated from familial hypercholesterolemic homozygotes was compared to hepatocytes from normal individuals. Fibroblast studies demonstrated that the familial hypercholesterolemic subjects studied were LDL receptor-negative (less than 1% normal receptor activity) and LDL receptor-defective (18% normal receptor activity). Cholesterol-depleted hepatocytes from normal subjects bound and internalized 125I-labeled LDL (Bmax = 2.2 micrograms LDL/mg cell protein). Preincubation of normal hepatocytes with 200 micrograms/ml LDL reduced binding and internalization by approx. 40%. In contrast, 125I-labeled LDL binding and internalization by receptor-negative familial hypercholesterolemic hepatocytes was unaffected by cholesterol loading and considerably lower than normal. This residual LDL uptake could not be ascribed to fluid phase endocytosis as determined by [14C]sucrose uptake. The residual LDL binding by familial hypercholesterolemia hepatocytes led to a small increase in hepatocyte cholesterol content which was relatively ineffective in reducing hepatocyte 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-CoA reductase activity. Receptor-defective familial hypercholesterolemia hepatocytes retained some degree of regulatable 125I-labeled LDL uptake, but LDL uptake did not lead to normal hepatocyte cholesterol content or 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-CoA reductase activity. These combined results indicate that the LDL receptor abnormality present in familial hypercholesterolemia fibroblasts reflects deranged hepatocyte LDL recognition and metabolism. In addition, a low-affinity, nonsaturable uptake process for LDL is present in human liver which does not efficiently modulate hepatocyte cholesterol content or synthesis.  相似文献   

5.
We recently demonstrated that the preventive effect of trifluoperazine (a potent inhibitor of calmodulin, protein kinase C, and phospholipase A2) on cholesterol-induced atherogenic activity of smooth muscle cells was mediated through its ability to inhibit smooth muscle cellular DNA synthesis coupled with stimulation of LDL receptor synthesis. The present study addressed the effect of trifluoperazine on cholesterol metabolism of aortic SMCs enriched with cholesterol through the nonreceptor pathway and revealed that (a) TFP caused inhibition of cholesterol synthesis compared with control cells bathed with hypercholesterolemic medium alone. (b) The drug also caused inhibition of free cholesterol and cholesteryl ester accumulation within smooth muscle cells compared to control cells. These results demonstrate that the preventive effect of TFP on atherogenic activity of smooth muscle cells may also be due to its ability to affect the altered/modified cholesterol metabolism of smooth muscle cells exposed to hypercholesterolemic medium in vitro.  相似文献   

6.
Serum lipoproteins control cell cholesterol content by regulating its uptake, biosynthesis, and excretion. Monolayers of cultured fibroblasts were used to study interactions with human high density (HDL) and low density (LDL) lipoproteins doubly labeled with [(3)H]cholesterol and (125)I in the apoprotein moiety. In the binding assay for LDL, the absence of specific LDL receptors in type II hypercholesterolemic fibroblasts was confirmed, whereas monolayers of virus-transformed human lung fibroblasts (VA-4) exhibited LDL binding characteristics essentially the same as normal lung fibroblasts. In the studies of HDL binding, specific HDL binding sites were demonstrated in normal and virus-transformed fibroblasts. In addition, type II hypercholesterolemic cells, despite the loss of LDL receptors, retained normal HDL binding sites. No significant competition was displayed between the two lipoprotein classes for their respective binding sites over a 5-fold concentration range. In VA-4 cells, the amount of lipoprotein required to saturate half the receptor sites was 3.5 micro g/ml (9 x 10(-9) M) for LDL and 9.1 micro g/ml (9 x 10(-8) M) for HDL. Pronase treatment reduced LDL binding by more than half but had no effect on HDL binding. Chloroquine, a lysomal enzyme inhibitor, stimulated net LDL uptake 3.5-fold by increasing internalized LDL but had essentially no effect on HDL uptake. Further experiments were conducted using doubly labeled lipoproteins to characterize the interaction of LDL and HDL with cells. While the cholesterol and protein moieties of LDL were incorporated into cells at similar rates, the uptake of the cholesterol moiety of HDL was 5 to 10 times more rapid than that of the protein component. Furthermore, the apoprotein component of LDL is extensively degraded following exposure, whereas the apoprotein moiety of HDL retains its macromolecular chromatographic characteristics. These results indicate that HDL and LDL bind to cultured cells at separate sites and that further processing of the two lipoprotein classes appears to take place by fundamentally different mechanisms.-Wu, J-D., J. Butler, and J. M. Bailey. Lipid metabolism in cultured cells XVIII. Comparative uptake of low density and high density lipoproteins by normal, hypercholesterolemic, and tumor virus-transformed human fibroblasts.  相似文献   

7.
This study characterizes the interactions of various rat and human lipoproteins with the lipoprotein cell surface receptors of rat and human cells. Iodinated rat very low density lipoproteins (VLDL), rat chylomicron remnants, rat low density lipoproteins (LDL), and rat high density lipoproteins containing predominantly apoprotein E (HDL1) bound to high affinity cell surface receptors of cultured rat fibroblasts and smooth muscle cells. Rat VLDL and chylomicron remnants were most avidly bound; the B-containing LDL and the E-containing HDL1 displayed lesser but similar binding. Rat HDL (d = 1.125 to 1.21) exhibited weak receptor binding; however, after recentrifugation to remove apoprotein E, they were devoid of binding activity. Competitive binding studies at 4 degrees C confirmed these results for normal lipoproteins and indicated that VLDL (B-VLDL), LDL, and HDLc (cholesterol-rich HDL1) isolated from hypercholesterolemic rats had increased affinity for the rat receptors compared with their normal counterparts, the most pronounced change being in the LDL. The cell surface receptor pathway in rat fibroblasts and smooth muscle cells resembled the system described for human fibroblasts as follows: 1) lipoproteins containing either the B or E apoproteins interacted with the receptors; 2) receptor binding activity was abolished by acetoacetylation or reductive methylation of a limited number of lysine residues of the lipoproteins; 3) receptor binding initiated the process of internalization and degradation of the apo-B- and apo-E-containing lipoproteins; 4) the lipoprotein cholesterol was re-esterified as determined by [14C]oleate incorporation into the cellular cholesteryl esters; and 5) receptor-mediated uptake (receptor number) was lipoprotein cholesterol. An important difference between rat and human fibroblasts was the inability of human LDL to interact with the cell surface receptors of rat fibroblasts. Rat lipoproteins did, however, react with human fibroblasts. Furthermore, the rat VLDL were the most avidly bound of the rat lipoproteins to rat fibroblasts. When the direct binding of 125I-VLDL was subjected to Scatchard analysis, the very high affinity of rat VLDL was apparent (Kd = 1 X 10(-11) M). Moreover, compared with data for rat LDL, the data suggested each VLDL particle bound to four to nine lipoprotein receptors. This multiple receptor binding could explain the enhanced binding affinity of the rat VLDL. The Scatchard plot of rat 125I-VLDL revealed a biphasic binding curve in rat and human fibroblast cells and in rat smooth muscle cells, suggesting two populations of rat VLDL. These results indicate that rat cells have a receptor pathway similar to, but not identical with, the LDL pathway of human cells. Since human LDL bind poorly to rat cell receptors on cultured rat fibroblasts and smooth muscle cells, metabolic studies using human lipoproteins in rats must be interpreted cautiously.  相似文献   

8.
We have investigated the effects of lipoproteins on sphingolipid metabolism in proximal renal tubular cells from normal subjects and low density lipoprotein (LDL) receptor-negative homozygous familial hypercholesterolemic subjects employing radioactive precursors, e.g. [3H]serine, [3H]glucose, and [14C]galactose. Compared to cells incubated with lipoprotein-deficient serum, maximum suppression (70-80%) of incorporation of [3H]glucose and [3H]serine into ceramide and LacCer occurred when the LDL concentration in the medium was 25 micrograms/ml medium, and addition of higher amounts of LDL (up to 500 micrograms/ml medium) to normal cells did not produce further suppression. In contrast, high density lipoproteins did not suppress the incorporation of [3H]glucose into lactosylceramide (LacCer) in normal cells. The incorporation of [14C] galactose into LacCer was also suppressed by LDL (50% suppression at a concentration of 100 micrograms/ml medium). In contrast, LDL modified by reductive methylation of lysine residues did not suppress the incorporation of [3H]glucose into LacCer and the incorporation of [3H]serine into ceramide, whereas, native LDL exerted a concentration-dependent suppression of [3H]serine incorporation into ceramide and sphingomyelin in normal cells. At high concentrations of LDL (50-500 micrograms/ml medium), the incorporation of [3H]glucose and [14C]galactose into LacCer in homozygous FH cells was stimulated approximately 2-fold. Maximum stimulation of [3H]serine incorporation into ceramides, LacCer, and sphingomyelin occurred at 100 micrograms LDL/ml medium. Our studies indicate that the endogenous synthesis of sphingolipids in normal renal cells is regulated by the LDL receptor. Modification of the lysine residues in LDL by reductive methylation results in the inability to suppress sphingolipid synthesis in normal cells. Lack of LDL receptors, as in the case of homozygous FH cells, results in the lack of suppression of endogenous sphingolipid synthesis.  相似文献   

9.
Fish oil supplementation in humans is often associated with an expanded low density lipoprotein (LDL) pool that is not thought to reflect increased production. Since data on clearance of LDL after fish oil supplementation (FO-LDL) are equivocal, normal volunteers (four men and three women) received ten capsules containing 3.6 g eicosapentaenoic acid and 2.9 g docosahexaenoic acid (approximately 2.5% total calories as methyl esters) for 2 weeks. Total plasma cholesterol was unchanged, but triglycerides decreased 30%. Low density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) and high density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C) were unchanged. Analysis of the LDL particles revealed that increased esterified cholesterol caused the FO-LDL core/surface ratio to be greater than baseline LDL (BL-LDL), resulting in a shift in mean LDL density from 1.060 to 1.056. N-3 fatty acids in FO-LDL were also increased greater than 40% at the expense of n-6 and n-9 fatty acids. Human hepatoma HepG2 cells were used to study the effects of FO-LDL on LDL receptor activity and mRNA abundance for the LDL receptor, 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A (HMG-CoA) reductase, and various apolipoproteins associated with cholesterol metabolism. In this system FO-LDL reduced LDL receptor activity compared to BL-LDL. Scatchard analysis revealed that LDL receptor number (Bmax) was reduced to one-third normal (P less than 0.001) whereas particle binding affinity was unchanged. The mRNA abundance for the LDL receptor and apoA-I were also depressed, even by low concentrations (10 micrograms/ml and 20 micrograms/ml LDL protein) of FO-LDL as compared to BL-LDL. HepG2 cells incubated with FO-LDL had decreased cellular free cholesterol but increased cholesteryl esters. Thus, moderate supplementation with fish oil n-3 fatty acids in normal humans enriches their LDL particles in cholesteryl esters and n-3 fatty acids. These particles depress both LDL receptor activity and LDL receptor mRNA abundance in HepG2 cells.  相似文献   

10.
Cholesterol synthesis in actively growing bovine vascular endothelial cells is regulated by low density lipoprotein (LDL) at a step prior to mevalonate formation, in a manner comparable to that found in aortic smooth muscle cells. LDL uptake by these cells is associated with induction of cholesterol esterification, an increase in total cell cholesterol, and an inhibition of endogenous sterol synthesis. In contrast, cholesterol metabolism in confluent contact-inhibited endothelial cultures was not significantly affected by LDL even though the cells bind the lipoprotein at high affinity receptor sites. Lysosomal degradation and subsequent regulatory effects on cellular cholesterol metabolism, however, were observed in contact-inhibited endothelial cells incubated with cationized rather than native LDL. Cationized LDL enter the cells independently of the high affinity sites. Therefore, the primary regulation of cholesterol metabolism in these cells is neither through the appropriate intracellular enzymes nor through the high affinity surface receptors, but via an inhibition of LDL internalization. It is suggested that this inhibition is due to a strict contact-inhibited morphology which enables the endothelium of the larger arteries to function as a selective barrier to the high circulating levels of plasma LDL.  相似文献   

11.
Apolipoprotein B (apoB) of plasma low density lipoproteins (LDL) binds to high affinity receptors on many cell types. A minor subclass of high density lipoproteins (HDL), termed HDL1, which contains apoE but lacks apoB, binds to the same receptor. Bound lipoproteins are engulfed, degraded, and regulate intracellular cholesterol metabolism and receptor activity. The HDL of many patients with liver disease is rich in apoE. We tested the hypothesis that such patient HDL would reduce LDL binding and would themselves regulate cellular cholesterol metabolism. Normal HDL had little effect on binding, uptake, and degradation of 125I-labeled LDL by cultured human skin fibroblasts. Patient HDL (d 1.063-1.21 g/ml) inhibited these processes, and in 15 of the 25 samples studied there was more than 50% inhibition at 125I-labeled LDL and HDL protein concentrations of 10 micrograms/ml and 25 micrograms/ml, respectively. There was a significant negative correlation between the percentage of 125I-labeled LDL bound and the apoE content of the competing HDL (r = -0.54, P less than 0.01). Patient 125I-labeled HDL was also taken up and degraded by the fibroblasts, apparently through the LDL-receptor pathway, stimulated cellular cholesterol esterification, increased cell cholesteryl ester content, and suppressed cholesterol synthesis and receptor activity. We conclude that LDL catabolism by the receptor-mediated pathway may be impaired in liver disease and that patient HDL may deliver cholesterol to cells.  相似文献   

12.
Oxidatively modified low density lipoproteins (Ox-LDL) may be involved in determining the formation of foam cells by inducing cellular cholesteryl ester accumulation. We studied the effect of copper oxidized LDL (Ox-LDL) on cholesterol accumulation and esterification in murine macrophages. Ox-LDL (44 micrograms/ml of lipoprotein cholesterol) increased the total cholesterol content of the cells from 29 to 69 micrograms/mg cell protein. Free cholesterol accounted for 85% of this increase. Acetyl LDL (Ac-LDL) (38 micrograms/ml of lipoprotein cholesterol), raised total cellular cholesterol content to a similar extent (76 micrograms/mg cell protein), however only 25% of the accumulated cholesterol was unesterified. When ACAT activity was determined after incubation of J774 cell with Ox- or Ac-LDL, Ox-LDL were 12 times less effective than Ac-LDL in stimulating cholesteryl ester formation. This was not due to an inhibition of ACAT by Ox-LDL since these lipoproteins failed to inhibit pre activated enzyme in cholesteryl ester-loaded macrophages. The uptake of 125I-Ox-LDL: was 175% that of 125I-Ac-LDL, while degradation was only 20%. All together these data suggest an altered intracellular processing of Ox-LDL, which may be responsible for free cholesterol accumulation.  相似文献   

13.
In normal human monocyte macrophages 125I-labeled beta-migrating very low density lipoproteins (125I-beta-VLDL), isolated from the plasma of cholesterol-fed rabbits, and 125I-human low density lipoprotein (LDL) were degraded at similar rates at protein concentrations up to 50 micrograms/ml. The high affinity degradation of 125I-labeled human LDL saturated at approximately 50 micrograms/ml; however, 125I-labeled rabbit beta-VLDL high affinity degradation saturated at 100-120 micrograms/ml. The activity of the beta-VLDL receptor was 3-fold higher than LDL receptor activity on freshly isolated normal monocyte macrophages, but with time-in-culture both receptor activities decreased and were similar after several days. The degradations of both beta-VLDL and LDL were Ca2+ sensitive, were markedly down regulated by sterols, and were up regulated by preincubation of the cells in a lipoprotein-free medium. The beta-VLDL receptor is genetically distinct from the LDL receptor as indicated by its presence on monocyte macrophages from a familial hypercholesterolemic homozygote. Human thoracic duct lymph chylomicrons as well as lipoproteins of Sf 20-5000 from fat-fed normal subjects inhibited the degradation of 125I-labeled rabbit beta-VLDL as effectively as nonradioactive rabbit beta-VLDL. We conclude: 1) the beta-VLDL receptor is genetically distinct from the LDL receptor, and 2) intestinally derived human lipoproteins are recognized by the beta-VLDL receptor on macrophages.  相似文献   

14.
Low density lipoproteins (LDL) isolated from the plasma of patients with angiographically demonstrable coronary heart disease (CHD) induced accumulation of triglycerides, free cholesterol, and cholesteryl esters in cultured macrophages, smooth muscle cells, and endothelial cells derived from uninvolved intima of human aorta, but not in skin fibroblasts or hepatoma cells. The sialic acid content of LDL from CHD patients was 40-75% lower than that from healthy donors. There was a negative correlation between LDL sialic acid content and the LDL-induced accumulation of total intracellular cholesterol. Neuraminidase treatment of LDL from normal healthy donors produced sialic acid-depleted LDL (Ds-LDL) which was able to stimulate intracellular lipid accumulation. Neuraminidase treatment of LDL from CHD patients further increased its capacity to induce intracellular lipid accumulation. Sialic acid-poor LDL isolated by affinity chromatography of LDL from CHD patients induced a 2- to 4-fold increase of free and esterified cholesterol in human intimal smooth muscle cells. Binding, uptake, and degradation of 125I-labeled Ds-LDL by macrophages and endothelial cells were 1.5- to 2-fold higher than for native LDL. Binding and uptake of Ds-LDL was inhibited 64-93% by the addition of 20-fold excess acetylated LDL (Ac-LDL); in the inverse experiment, the level of inhibition was 35-54%. These data indicate that a sialic acid-poor form of LDL isolated from CHD patients can interact with both native and scavenger LDL receptors. A sialic acid-poor form of LDL may be a naturally occurring ligand that interacts with the scavenger receptor(s) on macrophages and endothelial cells.  相似文献   

15.
The relationship between lipoproteins and growth of aortic smooth muscle cells has been a matter of controversy. We therefore reexamined this issue using serum-free defined media methodology. By themselves, LDL or HDL (50-500 micrograms/ml) from normolipemic human or bovine plasma produced little or no growth of homologous aortic smooth muscle cells incubated in serum-free medium that was supplemented with insulin and transferrin to maintain cell viability. In fact, LDL prepared in the absence of an antioxidant (BHT) was toxic to these cells. However, in the presence of maximally effective concentrations of platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF), LDL or HDL consistently increased the growth of homologous smooth muscle cells (up to twofold increased in DNA accumulation in 48 hr). Lipoproteins also augmented the growth response of arterial smooth muscle cells to fibroblast growth factor or epidermal growth factor. The mechanism of this effect was investigated further with HDL, because, in contrast to LDL, HDL apoproteins are water-soluble. Neither HDL delipidated by solvent extraction (apoHDL), purified bovine apoA-I, nor cholesterol added in the form of phospholipid vesicles appreciably increased PDGF-induced growth of bovine smooth muscle cells. However, HDL-like particles reconstituted by sonication of apoHDL with cholesterol and phospholipids did increase the growth of cultures of bovine smooth muscle cells treated with PDGF. Uptake of tritiated thymidine by cultures incubated with partially purified PDGF alone (10 micrograms/ml) was 5,693 +/- 235 dpm/24 hr compared to 10,381 +/- 645 dpm/24 hr (p less than 0.01) in the presence of both PDGF and reconstituted HDL-like particles (250 micrograms protein/ml). Thus both the lipid and protein components of HDL may be necessary for optimal potentiation of growth of mitogen-stimulated cells. These results indicate that lipoproteins from normolipemic sera are not bona fide growth factors but can potentiate the growth of mitogen-stimulated cells, perhaps by supplying exogenous cholesterol required for membrane biogenesis. This finding might be important in arterial injury when the release of PDGF and exposure to plasma lipoproteins could act in concert to stimulate the proliferation of smooth muscle cells.  相似文献   

16.
The loss in feedback control of cholesterol biosynthesis in tumor cells was examined in tissue culture. Human fibroblasts from normal subjects, SV40 tumor virus-transformed cell lines, and homozygous familial hypercholesterolemic cells as reference, were grown in tissue culture. Experiments were conducted to relate the regulatory enzyme for cholesterol biosynthesis, HMG CoA reductase, and the membrane-located binding receptors for low density lipoproteins (LDL) that mediate feedback control in normal cells. Monolayers of virus-transformed tumor cells exhibited specific (125)I-labeled LDL binding of 152 +/- 21 ng/mg cell protein, which was essentially the same as that of normal fibroblasts (135 +/- 20 ng/mg). Binding of LDL by familial hypercholesterolemic cells used as controls was only 8 +/- 3 ng/mg under the same test conditions. Basal levels of HMG CoA reductase in tumor cells of 45.2 +/- 6.5 units/mg cell protein were about twice those of normal cells. However, in contrast to the lack of feedback control of this enzyme observed with tumors in vivo, in both the normal and the transformed cells in vitro, activity of the enzyme decreased about fourfold when serum lipids were added. These findings demonstrate that tumor cells growing in vitro contain a normal complement of the membrane-located binding receptors for low density lipoproteins and, although the basal levels are higher than normal, an effective feedback regulation of the enzyme HMG CoA reductase is retained.  相似文献   

17.
Treatment of HepG2 cells in lipoprotein-deficient media with 4,4,10 beta-trimethyl-trans-decal-3 beta-ol (TMD) abolished the incorporation of [3H]acetate into cholesterol with concomitant accumulation of squalene 2,3(S)-oxide and squalene 2,3(S):22(S),23-dioxide, indicating a specific inhibition of oxidosqualene cyclase. The activity of 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl CoA (HMG-CoA) reductase was affected in a biphasic manner, being inhibited by 30% at low concentrations of TMD and stimulated by 30% at concentrations that completely shut down oxidosqualene cyclase. Treatment with TMD (greater than 20 micrograms/ml) doubled the specific binding and internalization of low density lipoproteins (LDL) and also enhanced their degradation to a degree comparable to that produced by lovastatin, a well-known inhibitor of HMG-CoA reductase. The enhanced binding of LDL to HepG2 cells appeared to occur as a result of an increase in the number of binding sites with no change in their binding affinity for the lipoprotein. At concentrations that completely inhibited cholesterol biosynthesis, TMD did not affect the ability of LDL-derived cholesterol to stimulate cholesterol esterification by seven- to tenfold or to stimulate bile acid secretion to a lesser degree. However, TMD treatment inhibited overall bile acid secretion by 75-85%. The compound had no inhibitory effect on the rates of secretion of either apolipoprotein B or of cholesterol by HepG2 cells into the culture medium. These data demonstrate that a specific inhibition of the sterol branch of isoprenoid biosynthetic pathway in hepatic cells by TMD is sufficient to induce the expression of LDL receptors and that the cholesterol delivered by LDL is available for normal metabolic purposes of the cell.  相似文献   

18.
We have recently demonstrated that lipids, particularly cholesterol, covalently bound to apolipoprotein B (apoB) are a stable marker of low density lipoprotein (LDL) oxidation (Tertov et al. 1995). The present study is an attempt to assess the relationship between the degree of LDL oxidation, evaluated by the content of apoB-bound cholesterol and the ability of LDL to induce cholesterol accumulation in cultured human aortic intimal smooth muscle cells, i.e. LDL atherogenicity. Native LDL was oxidized in vitro by copper ions, 2,2-azobis-(2-aminopropane hydrochloride), or sodium hypochlorite. Minimum degree of LDL in vitro oxidation necessary to convert LDL into atherogenic one was accompanied by an increase of apoB-bound cholesterol to the level much higher than that usually observed in freshly isolated atherogenic LDL from human blood. Moreover, elimination of LDL aggregates from in vitro oxidized LDL preparations by gel filtration led to loss of its atherogenic properties. Thus, the ability to induce cholesterol accumulation in cells, i.e. the atherogenicity of in vitro oxidized LDL is a result of LDL aggregation but not oxidation. We also studied the relationship between LDL atherogenicity and apoB-bound cholesterol content in LDL freshly isolated from healthy subjects and normo- and hypercholesterolemic patients with coronary atherosclerosis. The ability of human LDL to induce cholesterol accumulation in aortic smooth muscle cells did not correlate with the degree of in vivo LDL oxidation (r = 0.12, n = 90). It is concluded that LDL atherogenicity does not depend on the degree of lipid peroxidation in LDL particle.  相似文献   

19.
Studies of low density lipoprotein (LDL) metabolism in nonhuman model systems have indicated that the mammalian liver has dual mechanisms for the uptake and regulation of the concentration of plasma LDL. Heretofore, direct evaluation of lipoprotein uptake mechanisms in human hepatocytes has not been possible. In order to compare hepatocyte LDL uptake with fibroblast LDL metabolism, human hepatocytes were isolated and cultured from small biopsy specimens obtained from normolipidemic and homozygous familial hypercholesterolemic patients. Cells cultured in serum-free culture medium retained the morphological and biochemical characteristics of hepatocytes for at least 7 days. The uptake and degradation of LDL by hepatocytes was compared to that of the cultured human fibroblasts. Like fibroblasts, hepatocytes bound, internalized, and degraded LDL. In both cell types, uptake approached saturation at a concentration of 50 micrograms of LDL protein/ml. Competition for LDL binding by LDL, high density lipoprotein, and modified LD revealed that the hepatocyte binding was specific for LDL. Cellular cholesterol loading by incubation in LDL-enriched culture medium resulted in diminished LDL uptake in both cell types. Chemical modification of LDL by acetoacetylation, acetylation, and reductive methylation abolished LDL uptake and degradation by fibroblasts. However, hepatocytes bound and degraded the modified LDL at 30-50% the level of native LDL. Homozygous familial hypercholesterolemic hepatocytes were devoid of the LDL receptor pathway but metabolized native LDL to the extent observed with modified LDL uptake by normal hepatocytes. In contrast to the classic LDL receptor pathway, the second or alternate pathway does not lead to regulation of 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-CoA reductase activity. These findings indicate the presence of two separate pathways of LDL uptake in human hepatocytes which have different effects on hepatocytic cholesterol metabolism.  相似文献   

20.
The regulation of the LDL receptor activity in the human hepatoma cell line Hep G2 was studied. In Hep G2 cells, in contrast with fibroblasts, the LDL receptor activity was increased 2.5-fold upon increasing the concentration of normal whole serum in the culture medium from 20 to 100% by volume. Incubation of the Hep G2 cells with physiological concentrations of LDL (up to 700 micrograms/ml) instead of incubation under serum-free conditions resulted in a maximum 2-fold decrease in LDL receptor activity (10-fold decrease in fibroblasts). Incubation with physiological concentrations of HDL with a density of between 1.16 and 1.20 g/ml (heavy HDL) resulted in an approximately 7-fold increase in LDL receptor activity (1.5-fold increase in fibroblasts). This increased LDL receptor activity is due to an increase in the number of LDL receptors. Furthermore, simultaneous incubation of Hep G2 cells with LDL and heavy HDL (both 200 micrograms/ml) resulted in a 3-fold stimulation of the LDL receptor activity as compared with incubation in serum-free medium. 3-Hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-CoA reductase activity was also stimulated after incubation of Hep G2 with heavy HDL (up to 3-fold). The increased LDL receptor activity in Hep G2 cells after incubation with heavy HDL was independent of the action of lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase during that incubation. However, previous modification of heavy HDL by lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase resulted in an enhanced ability of heavy HDL to stimulate the LDL receptor activity. Our results indicate that in Hep G2 cells the heavy HDL-mediated stimulation of the LDL receptor activity overrules the LDL-mediated down-regulation and raises the suggestion that in man the presence of heavy HDL and the action of lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase in plasma may be of importance in receptor-mediated catabolism of LDL by the liver.  相似文献   

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