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1.
Apolipoprotein E (apoE) deficiency has been suggested to induce foam cell formation. Using lipoproteins obtained from wild-type mice and apoE-deficient mice expressing apoB-48 but not apoB-100, we studied apoE-deficient lipoprotein-induced changes in lipoprotein catabolism and protein expression in mouse peritoneal macrophages (MPMs). Our data demonstrate that incubation of MPMs with apoE-deficient lipoproteins induced intracellular lipoprotein, cholesteryl ester, and triglyceride accumulation, which was associated with a time-related decline in apoE-deficient lipoprotein degradation in MPMs. Confocal microscopy analysis indicated that the accumulated lipids were localized in lysosomes. ApoE-deficient lipoproteins reduced the protein levels of lysosomal acid lipase, cathepsin B, and cation-dependent mannose 6 phosphate receptor (MPR46). Exogenous apoE reduced apoE-deficient lipoprotein-induced lipid accumulation and attenuated the suppressive effect of apoE-deficient lipoproteins on lysosomal hydrolase and MPR46 expression. Although oxidized lipoproteins also increased lipid contents in MPMs, exogenous apoE could not attenuate oxidized lipoprotein-induced lipid accumulation. Our in vivo studies also showed that feeding apoE-deficient mice a high-fat diet resulted in cholesteryl ester and triglyceride accumulation and reduced lysosomal hydrolase expression in MPMs. These data suggest that apoE-deficient lipoproteins increase cellular lipid contents through pathways different from those activated by oxidized lipoproteins and that reducing lysosomal hydrolases in macrophages might be a mechanism by which apoE-deficient lipoproteins result in intralysosomal lipoprotein accumulation, thereby inducing foam cell formation.  相似文献   

2.
Macrophage-specific overexpression of cholesteryl ester hydrolysis in hormone-sensitive lipase transgenic (HSL Tg) female mice paradoxically increases cholesterol esterification and cholesteryl ester accumulation in macrophages, and thus susceptibility to diet-induced atherosclerosis compared to nontransgenic C57BL/6 mice. The current studies suggest that whereas increased cholesterol uptake could contribute to transgenic foam cell formation, there are no differences in cholesterol synthesis and the expression of cholesterol efflux mediators (ABCA1, ABCG1, apoE, PPARgamma, and LXRalpha) compared to wild-type macrophages. HSL Tg macrophages exhibit twofold greater efflux of cholesterol to apoA-I in vitro, suggesting the potential rate-limiting role of cholesteryl ester hydrolysis in efflux. However, macrophage cholesteryl ester levels appear to depend on the relative efficacy of alternate pathways for free cholesterol in either efflux or re-esterification. Thus, increased atherosclerosis in HSL Tg mice appears to be due to the coupling of the efficient re-esterification of excess free cholesterol to its limited removal mediated by the cholesterol acceptors in these mice. The overexpression of cholesterol acceptors in HSL-apoA-IV double-transgenic mice increases plasma HDL levels and decreases diet-induced atherosclerosis compared to HSL Tg mice, with aortic lesions reduced to sizes in nontransgenic littermates. The results in vivo are consistent with the effective efflux from HSL Tg macrophages supplemented with HDL and apoA-I in vitro, and highlight the importance of cholesterol acceptors in inhibiting atherosclerosis caused by imbalances in the cholesteryl ester cycle.  相似文献   

3.
The properties of the triglyceride- and cholesteryl ester-hydrolyzing activity by an acid lipase from rabbit aortic tissue were compared under different experimental conditions. Radiolabeled cholesteryl oleate or triolein was incorporated into phospholipid vesicles by sonication and the resulting preparations were used for in vitro studies. No distinction was observed between triglyceride lipase and cholesterol esterase activity in the aortic cytosol fraction following either thermal inactivation, inhibition by a mercurial, fractionation by ammonium sulfate or acid precipitation, or DEAE-cellulose chromatography. Addition of rabbit lipoproteins to the assay system resulted in inhibition of both cholesterol esterase and triglyceride lipase activity. Parallel changes in the hydrolysis of both substrates also were observed when exogenously added lipids were added to the incubation system in various physical states. Specificities of the enzyme system towards different cholesteryl esters were examined. No differences in the rate of hydrolysis were observed between cholesteryl oleate, palmitate and linoleate. The data suggest that a single acid lipase, presumably of lysosomal origin, has broad specificity towards triglycerides and cholesteryl esters, and may play a role in the hydrolysis of these lipids during intralysosomal degradation of lipoproteins.  相似文献   

4.

Objective

Elevated plasma phospholipid transfer protein (PLTP) expression may increase atherosclerosis in mice by reducing plasma HDL and increasing hepatic VLDL secretion. Hepatic lipase (HL) is a lipolytic enzyme involved in several aspects of the same pathways of lipoprotein metabolism. We investigated whether the effects of elevated PLTP activity are compromised by HL deficiency.

Methods and results

HL deficient mice were crossbred with PLTP transgenic (PLTPtg) mice and studied in the fasted state. Plasma triglycerides were decreased in HL deficiency, explained by reduced hepatic triglyceride secretion. In PLTPtg mice, a redistribution of HL activity between plasma and tissue was evident and plasma triglycerides were also decreased. HL deficiency mitigated or even abolished the stimulatory effect of elevated PLTP activity on hepatic triglyceride secretion. HL deficiency had a modest incremental effect on plasma HDL, which remained present in PLTP transgenic/HL−/− mice, thereby partially compensating the decrease in HDL caused by elevation of PLTP activity. HDL decay experiments showed that the fractional turnover rate of HDL cholesteryl esters was delayed in HL deficient mice, increased in PLTPtg mice and intermediate in PLTPtg mice in an HL−/− background.

Conclusions

HL affects hepatic VLDL. Elevated PLTP activity lowers plasma HDL-cholesterol by stimulating the plasma turnover and hepatic uptake of HDL cholesteryl esters. HL is not required for the increase in hepatic triglyceride secretion or for the lowering of HDL-cholesterol induced by PLTP overexpression.  相似文献   

5.
Lysosomal acid lipase (LAL) is the only known enzyme, which hydrolyzes cholesteryl esters and triacylglycerols in lysosomes of multiple cells and tissues. Here, we explored the role of LAL in brown adipose tissue (BAT). LAL-deficient (Lal?/?) mice exhibit markedly reduced UCP1 expression in BAT, modified BAT morphology with accumulation of lysosomes, and mitochondrial dysfunction, consequently leading to regular hypothermic events in mice kept at room temperature. Cold exposure resulted in reduced lipid uptake into BAT, thereby aggravating dyslipidemia and causing life threatening hypothermia in Lal?/? mice. Linking LAL as a potential regulator of lipoprotein lipase activity, we found Angptl4 mRNA expression upregulated in BAT. Our data demonstrate that LAL is critical for shuttling fatty acids derived from circulating lipoproteins to BAT during cold exposure. We conclude that inhibited lysosomal lipid hydrolysis in BAT leads to impaired thermogenesis in Lal?/? mice.  相似文献   

6.
Lysosomal acid lipase (LAL) is an essential enzyme that hydrolyzes triglycerides (TGs) and cholesteryl esters (CEs) in lysosomes. Genetic LAL mutations lead to Wolman disease (WD) and cholesteryl ester storage disease (CESD). An LAL-null (lal(-/-)) mouse model resembles human WD/CESD with storage of CEs and TGs in multiple organs. Human LAL (hLAL) was expressed in Nicotiana benthamiana using the GENEWARE expression system (G-hLAL). Purified G-hLAL showed mannose receptor-dependent uptake into macrophage cell lines (J774E). Intraperitoneal injection of G-hLAL produced peak activities in plasma at 60 min and in the liver and spleen at 240 min. The t(1/2) values were: approximately 90 min (plasma), approximately 14 h (liver), and approximately 32 h (spleen), with return to baseline by approximately 150 h in liver and approximately 200 h in spleen. Ten injections of G-hLAL (every 3 days) into lal(-/-) mice produced normalization of hepatic color, decreases in hepatic cholesterol and TG contents, and diminished foamy macrophages in liver, spleen, and intestinal villi. All injected lal(-/-) mice developed anti-hLAL protein antibodies, but suffered no adverse events. These studies demonstrate the feasibility of using plant-expressed, recombinant hLAL for the enzyme therapy of human WD/CESD with general implications for other lysosomal storage diseases.  相似文献   

7.
The role of macrophage lipoprotein lipase (LpL) in the development of atherosclerosis and adiposity was examined in macrophage LpL knockout (MLpLKO) mice. MLpLKO mice were generated using cre-loxP gene targeting. Loss of LpL in macrophages did not alter plasma LpL activity or lipoprotein levels. Incubation of apolipoprotein E (ApoE)-deficient β-VLDL with peritoneal macrophages from ApoE knockout mice lacking macrophage LpL (MLpLKO/ApoEKO) led to less cholesteryl ester formation than that found with ApoEKO macrophages. MLpLKO/ApoEKO macrophages had reduced intracellular triglyceride levels, with decreased CD36 and carnitine palmitoyltransferase-1 mRNA levels compared with ApoEKO macrophages, when incubated with VLDL. Although both MLpLKO/ApoEKO and ApoEKO mice developed comparable hypercholesterolemia in response to feeding with a Western-type diet for 12 weeks, atherosclerosis was less in MLpLKO/ApoEKO mice. Epididymal fat mass and gene expression levels associated with inflammation did not differ between the two groups. In conclusion, macrophage LpL plays an important role in the development of atherosclerosis but not adiposity.  相似文献   

8.
Lysosomal acid lipase (LAL)-dependent lipolysis degrades cholesteryl ester (CE) and triglyceride in the lysosome. LAL deficiency in human and mice leads to hypercholesterolemia, hepatic CE deposition, and atherosclerosis. Despite its hepatocyte-specific deficiency leads to CE accumulation, the regulation of LAL in cholesterol metabolic disease remains elusive. For the in vitro study, the target gene Lipa was transfected with recombinant shRNA or lentiviral vector in Hepa1-6 cells. It was found that LAL silencing in cells affected lysosomal function by reducing LAL activity and proteolytic activity, and altered the expression of genes related to cholesterol metabolism and autophagy, leading to cholesterol accumulation; whereas LAL overexpression improved the above effects. To explore the impacts of hepatic LAL on cholesterol metabolic disease in vivo, apolipoprotein E deficient (ApoE−/−) mice were intravenously injected with lentivirus to achieve hepatic LAL overexpression and fed a Western diet for 16 weeks. The results showed that hepatic LAL overexpression significantly reduced plasma lipid levels, alleviated inflammation and oxidative status in plasma and liver, and attenuated hepatic steatosis and fibrosis in ApoE−/− mice. Mechanically, hepatic LAL promoted cholesterol transport and biliary excretion by increasing liver X receptor alpha (LXRα) and its downstream genes, and modulated the compliance of the autophagy-lysosomal pathway. Our data provide the original evidence of the validity of hepatic LAL in controlling cholesterol metabolism and liver homeostasis, suggesting that targeting hepatic LAL may provide a promising approach to rescue cholesterol metabolic disorders, such as hypercholesterolemia and liver disease.  相似文献   

9.
Atherosclerosis is one of the major causes of morbidity and mortality in the western world. The existing data of elevated expression levels of proteins like DNA damage and DNA repair enzymes in human atherosclerotic plaques are reviewed. From the literature, the effect of overexpression of different proteins using adenoviral vectors or the model of transgenic mice on the development of atherosclerosis will be discussed. Special focus is placed on the lysosomal acid lipase (LAL), because LAL connects extra-cellular with intra-cellular lipid metabolism and is the only hydrolase for cleavage of cholesteryl esters delivered to the lysosomes. Patients with a deficiency of LAL show an accumulation of lipids in the cells and develop pre-mature atherosclerosis. To answer the question of the influence of LAL in atherosclerosis if overexpressed, we show for the first time data of transgenic mice overexpressing LAL and the effect on the lipid level.  相似文献   

10.
The lipid droplet (LD) is the major site of cholesterol storage in macrophage foam cells and is a potential therapeutic target for the treatment of atherosclerosis. Cholesterol, stored as cholesteryl esters (CEs), is liberated from this organelle and delivered to cholesterol acceptors. The current paradigm attributes all cytoplasmic CE hydrolysis to the action of neutral CE hydrolases. Here, we demonstrate an important role for lysosomes in LD CE hydrolysis in cholesterol-loaded macrophages, in addition to that mediated by neutral hydrolases. Furthermore, we demonstrate that LDs are delivered to lysosomes via autophagy, where lysosomal acid lipase (LAL) acts to hydrolyze LD CE to generate free cholesterol mainly for ABCA1-dependent efflux; this process is specifically induced upon macrophage cholesterol loading. We conclude that, in macrophage foam cells, lysosomal hydrolysis contributes to the mobilization of LD-associated cholesterol for reverse cholesterol transport.  相似文献   

11.
Lysosomal acid lipase (LAL) hydrolyzes cholesteryl esters (CE) and triglycerides (TG) to generate fatty acids (FA) and cholesterol. LAL deficiency (LAL-D) in both humans and mice leads to hepatomegaly, hypercholesterolemia, and shortened life span. Despite its essential role in lysosomal neutral lipid catabolism, the cell type-specific contribution of LAL to disease progression is still elusive. To investigate the role of LAL in the liver in more detail and to exclude the contribution of LAL in macrophages, we generated hepatocyte-specific LAL-deficient mice (Liv-Lipa−/−) and fed them either chow or high fat/high cholesterol diets (HF/HCD). Comparable to systemic LAL-D, Liv-Lipa−/− mice were resistant to diet-induced obesity independent of food intake, movement, and energy expenditure. Reduced body weight gain was mainly due to reduced white adipose tissue depots. Furthermore, Liv-Lipa−/− mice exhibited improved glucose clearance during glucose and insulin tolerance tests compared to control mice. Analysis of hepatic lipid content revealed a massive reduction of TG, whereas CE concentrations were markedly increased, leading to CE crystal formation in the livers of Liv-Lipa−/− mice. Elevated plasma transaminase activities, increased pro-inflammatory cytokines and chemokines as well as hepatic macrophage infiltration indicated liver inflammation. Our data provide evidence that hepatocyte-specific LAL deficiency is sufficient to alter whole-body lipid and energy homeostasis in mice. We conclude that hepatic LAL plays a pivotal role by preventing liver damage and maintaining lipid and energy homeostasis, especially during high lipid availability.  相似文献   

12.
Previous studies have shown that cultured fibroblasts derived from patients with genetic defects in lysosomal acid lipase (i. e. the Wolman Syndrome and Cholesteryl Ester Storage Disease) are defective in their ability to hydrolyze the cholesteryl esters contained in plasma low density lipoprotein (LDL). As a result, these mutant cells show a reduced responsiveness to the regulatory actions of LDL, as evidenced by a decreased LDL-mediated suppression of the activity of 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A reductase and by a decreased LDL-mediated activation of cellular cholesteryl ester formation. In the current studies, the Wolman Syndrome and Cholesteryl Ester Storage Disease cells were grown in the same Petri dish with mutant fibroblasts derived from a patient with the homozygous form of Familial Hypercholesterolemia. Whereas pure monolayers of either the Familial Hypercholesterolemia cells (lacking cell surface LDL receptors) or the acid lipase-deficient cells (lacking cholesteryl ester hydrolase activity) responded poorly to LDL, the mixed monolayers developed lipoprotein responsiveness as measured by an enhancement of both LDL-mediated suppression of 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A reductase activity and LDL-mediated stimulation of cholesteryl ester formation. This effect was shown to result from the release of the lysosomal acid lipase from the Familial Hypercholesterolemia homozygote cells into the culture medium and its subsequent uptake by the acid lipase-deficient cells. The acquisition of this acid lipase activity enhanced the ability of the Wolman Syndrome and Cholesteryl Ester Storage Disease cells to respond to the lipoprotein by suppression of 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A reductase and activation of cellular cholesteryl ester formation. These data emphasize the importance of the lysosomal acid lipase in the cellular metabolism of LDL cholesteryl esters and, in addition, demonstrate that delivery of this enzyme to genetically deficient cells can enhance the regulatory response to the lipoprotein.  相似文献   

13.
Cellular cholesterol homeostasis is increasingly being recognized as an important determinant of the inflammatory status of macrophages, and a decrease in cellular cholesterol levels polarizes macrophages toward an anti-inflammatory or M2 phenotype. Cholesteryl ester hydrolase (CEH) catalyzes the hydrolysis of stored intracellular cholesteryl esters (CE) and thereby enhances free cholesterol efflux and reduces cellular CE content. We have reported earlier reduced atherosclerosis as well as lesion necrosis and improved insulin sensitivity (due to decreased adipose tissue inflammation) in macrophage-specific CEH transgenic (CEHTg) mice in the LDLR(-/-) background. In the present study, we examined the effects of reduced intracellular accumulation of CE in CEHTg macrophages in an established diabetic mouse model, namely the leptin-deficient ob/ob mouse. Macrophage-specific transgenic expression of CEH improved glucose tolerance in ob/ob-CEHTg mice significantly compared with ob/ob nontransgenic littermates, but with no apparent change in macrophage infiltration into the adipose tissue. However, there was a significant decrease in hepatic lipid accumulation in ob/ob-CEHTg mice. Consistently, decreased [(14)C]acetate incorporation into total lipids and triglycerides was noted in precision-cut liver slices from ob/ob-CEHTg mice. In the primary hepatocyte-macrophage coculture system, macrophages from CEHTg mice significantly reduced the incorporation of [(14)C]acetate into triglycerides in hepatocytes, indicating a direct effect of macrophages on hepatocyte triglyceride biosynthesis. Kupffer cells isolated from ob/ob-CEHTg mice were polarized toward an anti-inflammatory M2 (Ly6C(lo)) phenotype. Taken together, these studies demonstrate that transgenic overexpression of CEH in macrophages polarizes hepatic macrophages (Kupffer cells) to an anti-inflammatory M2 phenotype that attenuates hepatic lipid synthesis and accumulation.  相似文献   

14.
The hydrolysis of cholesteryl esters contained in plasma low density lipoprotein was reduced in cultured fibroblasts derived from a patient with cholesteryl ester storage disease, an inborn error of metabolism in which lysosomal acid lipase activity is deficient. While these mutant cells showed a normal ability to bind low density lipoprotein at its high affinity cell surface receptor site, to take up the bound lipoprotein through endocytosis, and to hydrolyze the protein component of the lipoprotein in lysosomes, their defective lysosomal hydrolysis of the cholesteryl ester component of the lipoprotein led to the accumulation within the cell of unhydrolyzed cholesteryl esters, the fatty acid distribution of which resembled that of plasma lipoprotein. When the cholesteryl ester storage disease cells were incubated with low density lipoprotein, the reduced rate of liberation of free cholesterol by these mutant cells was associated with a delay in the occurrence of two lipoprotein-mediated regulatory events, suppression of 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A reductase activity, and activation of endogenous cholesteryl ester formation. In contrast to their defective hydrolysis of exogenously derived lipoprotein-bound cholesteryl esters, the choleseryl ester storage disease cells showed a normal rate of hydrolysis of cholesteryl esters that had been synthesized within the cell. These data lend support to the concept that in cultured human fibroblasts cholesteryl esters entering the cell bound to low density lipoprotein are hydrolyzed within the lysosome and that one of the functions of this intracellular organelle is to supply the cell with free cholesterol.  相似文献   

15.
Triglyceride-rich lipoproteins derived from ten normo- and hyperlipidemic apoE-2 homozygotes were analyzed for their composition, beta-VLDL content, and their ability to induce cholesteryl ester storage in macrophages. In six of these probands apoE sequence analysis revealed that the cysteine residues were at positions 112 and 158 of the amino acid sequence (Rall et al. 1983. J. Clin. Invest. 71: 1023-1031). ApoE-2 of these six and the other four patients was further analyzed by SDS electrophoresis to exclude the presence of apoE-2* (Rall et al. 1982. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA. 79: 4696-4700). The relative serum concentrations of free and esterified cholesterol transported in the d less than 1.006 g/ml and d 1.006-1.019 g/ml lipoproteins of the apoE-2 homozygotes was significantly higher as compared to controls. Compositional analysis of these lipoproteins revealed a relative reduction of triglycerides and a relative increase of cholesteryl esters as compared to controls. In most patients, with increasing serum triglyceride levels the cholesteryl ester concentration increased in d less than 1.006 g/ml and d 1.006-1.019 g/ml lipoproteins. However, in three patients with a low content of beta-VLDL, the increase in the d less than 1.006 g/ml fraction cholesterol was mostly due to free cholesterol and not due to cholesteryl esters. The degree of the macrophage cholesteryl ester accumulation induced by d less than 1.006 g/ml lipoproteins was mostly dependent on the concentration of the beta-migrating fraction (beta-VLDL). The amount of beta-VLDL and pre-beta-VLDL contained in the d less than 1.006 g/ml fraction was determined densitometrically after electrophoretic separation. It could be demonstrated that the beta-VLDL content in the d less than 1.006 g/ml fraction of the apoE-2 homozygous patients was largely independent of serum triglyceride and serum cholesterol levels. When macrophages were incubated with the IDL fraction (d 1.006-1.019 g/ml) from the apoE-2 patients, no significant increase in cellular cholesteryl esters above control levels was observed. Studies with purified lipoprotein lipase (LPL) and hepatic triglyceride lipase (HTGL) clearly revealed that both enzymes interacted with apoE-2 VLDL (binding, hydrolysis) to a lesser degree compared to control preparations. However, the apoE-2 VLDL preparations containing a low content of beta-VLDL were better substrates for LPL and HTGL than those containing a high beta-VLDL content. It is concluded from our studies that the plasma beta-VLDL content in apoE-2 homozygotes is a major determinant for cholesteryl ester accumulation in macrophages.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
Cholesteryl esters are selectively removed from high density lipoproteins by hepatocytes and steroidogenic cells through a process mediated by scavenger receptor BI. In the liver this cholesterol is secreted into bile, primarily as free cholesterol. Previous work showed that carboxyl ester lipase enhanced selective uptake of cholesteryl ether from high density lipoprotein by an unknown mechanism. Experiments were performed to determine whether carboxyl ester lipase plays a role in scavenger receptor BI-mediated selective uptake. When added to cultures of HepG2 cells, carboxyl ester lipase cofractionated with scavenger receptor BI and [(3)H]cholesteryl ether-labeled high density lipoprotein in lipid raft fractions of cell homogenates. Confocal microscopy of immunostained carboxyl ester lipase and scavenger receptor BI showed a close association of these proteins in HepG2 cells. The enzyme and receptor also cofractionated from homogenates of mouse liver using two different fractionation methods. Antibodies that block scavenger receptor BI function prevented carboxyl ester lipase stimulation of selective uptake in primary hepatocytes from carboxyl ester lipase knockout mice. Heparin blockage of cell-surface proteoglycans also prevented carboxyl ester lipase stimulation of cholesteryl ester uptake by HepG2 cells. Inhibition of carboxyl ester lipase activity in HepG2 cells reduced hydrolysis of high density lipoprotein-cholesteryl esters approximately 40%. In vivo, hydrolysis was similarly reduced in lipid rafts from the livers of carboxyl ester lipase-null mice compared with control animals. Primary hepatocytes from these mice yielded similar results. The data suggest that carboxyl ester lipase plays a physiological role in hepatic selective uptake and metabolism of high density lipoprotein cholesteryl esters by direct and indirect interactions with the scavenger receptor BI pathway.  相似文献   

17.
Carboxyl ester lipase (CEL, also called cholesterol esterase or bile salt-dependent lipase) is a lipolytic enzyme capable of hydrolyzing cholesteryl esters, triacylglycerols, and phospholipids in a trihydroxy bile salt-dependent manner but hydrolyzes ceramides and lysophospholipids via bile salt-independent mechanisms. Although CEL is synthesized predominantly in the pancreas, a low level of CEL expression was reported in human macrophages. This study used transgenic mice with macrophage CEL expression at levels comparable with that observed in human macrophages to explore the functional role and physiological significance of macrophage CEL expression. Peritoneal macrophages from CEL transgenic mice displayed a 4-fold increase in [(3)H]oleate incorporation into cholesteryl [(3)H]oleate compared with CEL-negative macrophages when the cells were incubated under basal conditions in vitro. When challenged with acetylated low density lipoprotein, cholesteryl ester accumulation was 2.5-fold higher in macrophages expressing the CEL transgene. The differences in cholesteryl ester accumulation were attributed to the lower levels of ceramide and lysophosphatidylcholine in CEL-expressing cells than in CEL-negative cells. CEL transgenic mice bred to an atherosclerosis susceptible apoE(-/-) background displayed an approximate 4-fold higher atherosclerotic lesion area than apoE(-/-) mice without the CEL transgene when both were fed a high fat/cholesterol diet. Plasma level of the atherogenic lysophosphatidylcholine was lower in the CEL transgenic mice, but plasma cholesterol level and lipoprotein profile were similar between the two groups. These studies documented that CEL expression in macrophages is pro-atherogenic and that the mechanism is because of its hydrolysis of ceramide and lysophosphatidylcholine in promoting cholesterol esterification and decreasing cholesterol efflux.  相似文献   

18.
Storage of cholesteryl esters in the cytoplasm of macrophages is one of the earliest and most ubiquitous event observed in the development of arteriosclerosis. Macrophages have an enormous capacity to uptake and store cholesterol in the form of cytosolic cholesteryl ester droplets. These stores are mobilized by the action of a neutral cholesteryl ester hydrolase (NCEH), producing free cholesterol that is either secreted to extracellular acceptors or reesterified. It has been proposed that hormone-sensitive lipase (HSL) is responsible for the NCEH activity in macrophages. The present work shows, however, that peritoneal macrophages from HSL null mice hydrolyze cytosolic stores of cholesteryl esters at a comparable rate to that of peritoneal macrophages from wild-type mice, therefore demonstrating that HSL is not the main NCEH in macrophages.  相似文献   

19.
The functional roles of neutral lipids are poorly understood in the lung. Blocking cholesteryl ester and triglyceride metabolism in lysosomal acid lipase gene knockout mice (lal-/-) resulted in a high level of neutrophil influx in the lungs as early as 2 mo of age. Bronchoalveolar macrophages appeared foamy and gradually increased in number with age progression. Affymetrix GeneChip array analysis of lung mRNA showed increased levels of proinflammatory cytokine (including IL-1beta, IL-6, and TNF-alpha) and matrix metalloproteinase (including MMP-8, MMP-9, and MMP-12) expression in lal-/- mice. With age progression, some areas of lal-/- mice developed severe abnormal cell proliferation and alveolar remodeling. In other areas, alveolar destruction (i.e., emphysema) was observed. In addition, Clara cell hypertrophy and hyperplasia developed in conducting airways. The pathophysiological phenotypes in the lal-/- mouse lungs became more severe with increasing age. The studies support the concept that neutral lipid metabolites play essential roles in pulmonary homeostasis, inflammatory responses, remodeling, and injury repair.  相似文献   

20.
The relationship of cholesteryl ester hydrolysis to the physical state of the cholesteryl ester in J774 murine macrophages was explored in cells induced to store cholesteryl esters either in anisotropic (ordered) inclusions or isotropic (liquid) inclusions. In contrast to other cell systems, the rate of cholesteryl ester hydrolysis was faster in cells containing anisotropic inclusions than in cells containing isotropic inclusions. Two contributing factors were identified. Kinetic analyses of the rates of hydrolysis are consistent with a substrate competition by co-deposited triglyceride in cells with isotropic inclusions. In addition, hydrolysis of cholesteryl esters in cells with anisotropic droplets is mediated by both cytoplasmic and lysosomal lipolytic enzymes, as shown by using the lysosomotropic agent, chloroquine, and an inhibitor of neutral cholesteryl ester hydrolase, umbelliferyl diethylphosphate. In cells containing anisotropic inclusions, hydrolysis was partially inhibited by incubation in media containing either chloroquine or umbelliferyl diethylphosphate. Together, chloroquine and umbelliferyl diethylphosphate completely inhibited hydrolysis. However, when cells containing isotropic inclusions were incubated with umbelliferyl diethylphosphate, cholesteryl ester hydrolysis was completely inhibited, but chloroquine had no effect. Transmission electron microscopy demonstrated a primarily lysosomal location for lipid droplets in cells with anisotropic droplets and both non-lysosomal and lysosomal populations of lipid droplets in cells with isotropic droplets.These results support the conclusion that there is a lysosomal component to the hydrolysis of stored cholesteryl esters in foam cells.  相似文献   

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