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1.
During the present study the contribution of lipoprotein lipase (LPL) to low density lipoprotein (LDL) holoparticle and LDL-lipid (alpha-tocopherol (alphaTocH)) turnover in primary porcine brain capillary endothelial cells (BCECs) was investigated. The addition of increasing LPL concentrations to BCECs resulted in up to 11-fold higher LDL holoparticle cell association. LPL contributed to LDL holoparticle turnover, an effect that was substantially increased in response to LDL-receptor up-regulation. The addition of LPL increased selective uptake of LDL-associated alphaTocH in BCECs up to 5-fold. LPL-dependent selective alphaTocH uptake was unaffected by the lipase inhibitor tetrahydrolipstatin but was substantially inhibited in cells where proteoglycan sulfation was inhibited by treatment with NaClO(3). Thus, selective uptake of LDL-associated alphaTocH requires interaction of LPL with heparan-sulfate proteoglycans. Although high level adenoviral overexpression of scavenger receptor BI (SR-BI) in BCECs resulted in a 2-fold increase of selective LDL-alphaTocH uptake, SR-BI did not act in a cooperative manner with LPL. Although the addition of LPL to BCEC Transwell cultures significantly increased LDL holoparticle cell association and selective uptake of LDL-associated alphaTocH, holoparticle transcytosis across this porcine blood-brain barrier (BBB) model was unaffected by the presence of LPL. An important observation during transcytosis experiments was a substantial alphaTocH depletion of LDL particles that were resecreted into the basolateral compartment. The relevance of LPL-dependent alphaTocH uptake across the BBB was confirmed in LPL-deficient mice. The absence of LPL resulted in significantly lower cerebral alphaTocH concentrations than observed in control animals.  相似文献   

2.
From the severe neurological syndromes resulting from vitamin E deficiency, it is evident that an adequate supply of the brain with alpha-tocopherol (alphaTocH), the biologically most active member of the vitamin E family, is of utmost importance. However, uptake mechanisms of alphaTocH in cells constituting the blood-brain barrier are obscure. Therefore, we studied the interaction of low (LDL) and high (HDL) density lipoproteins (the major carriers of alphaTocH in the circulation) with monolayers of primary porcine brain capillary endothelial cells (pBCECs) and compared the ability of these two lipoprotein classes to transfer lipoprotein-associated alphaTocH to pBCECs. With regard to potential binding proteins, we could identify the presence of the LDL receptor and a putative HDL3 binding protein with an apparent molecular mass of 100 kDa. At 4 degrees C, pBCECs bound LDL with high affinity (K(D) = 6 nM) and apolipoprotein E-free HDL3 with low affinity (98 nM). The binding capacity was 20,000 (LDL) and 200,000 (HDL3) lipoprotein particles per cell. alphaTocH uptake was approximately threefold higher from HDL3 than from LDL when [14C]alphaTocH-labeled lipoprotein preparations were used. The majority of HDL3-associated alphaTocH was taken up in a lipoprotein particle-independent manner, exceeding HDL3 holoparticle uptake 8- to 20-fold. This uptake route is less important for LDL-associated alphaTocH (alphaTocH uptake approximately 1.5-fold higher than holoparticle uptake). In line with tracer experiments, mass transfer studies with unlabeled lipoproteins revealed that alphaTocH uptake from HDL3 was almost fivefold more efficient than from LDL. Biodiscrimination studies indicated that uptake efficacy for the eight different stereoisomers of synthetic alphaTocH is nearly identical. Our findings indicate that HDL could play a major role in supplying the central nervous system with alphaTocH in vivo.  相似文献   

3.
The present study aimed to investigate pathways that contribute to uptake and transcytosis of high-density lipoproteins (HDLs) and HDL-associated alpha-tocopherol (alpha TocH) across an in vitro model of the blood-brain barrier (BBB). In primary porcine brain capillary endothelial cells HDL-associated alpha TocH was taken up in 10-fold excess of HDL holoparticles, indicating efficient selective uptake, a pathway mediated by scavenger receptor class B, type I (SR-BI). SR-BI was present in caveolae of brain capillary endothelial cells and expressed almost exclusively at the apical membrane. Disruption of caveolae with methyl-beta-cyclodextrin (CDX) resulted in (mis)sorting of SR-BI to the basolateral membrane. Immunohistochemistry of porcine brain cryosections revealed SR-BI expression on brain capillary endothelial cells and presumably astrocytic endfeet. HDL-associated [(14)C]alpha TocH taken up by brain capillary endothelial cells was recovered in sucrose gradient fractions containing the majority of cellular caveolin-1, the major caveolae-associated protein. During mass transfer studies using alpha TocH-enriched HDL, approximately 50% of cellular alpha TocH was recovered with the bulk of cellular caveolin-1 and SR-BI. Efflux experiments revealed that a substantial amount of cell-associated [(14)C]alpha TocH could be mobilized into the culture medium. In addition, apical-to-basolateral transport of HDL holoparticles and HDL-associated alpha TocH was saturable. Results from the present study suggest that part of cerebral apolipoprotein A-I and alpha TocH originates from plasma HDL transcytosed across the BBB and that caveolae-located SR-BI facilitates selective uptake of HDL-associated alpha TocH at the BBB.  相似文献   

4.
Scavenger receptor, class B, type I (SR-BI) mediates the selective uptake of high density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesteryl ester without the uptake and degradation of the particle. In transfected cells SR-BI recognizes HDL, low density lipoprotein (LDL) and modified LDL, protein-free lipid vesicles containing anionic phospholipids, and recombinant lipoproteins containing apolipoprotein (apo) A-I, apoA-II, apoE, or apoCIII. The molecular basis for the recognition of such diverse ligands by SR-BI is unknown. We have used direct binding analysis and chemical cross-linking to examine the interaction of murine (m) SR-BI with apoA-I, the major protein of HDL. The results show that apoA-I in apoA-I/palmitoyl-oleoylphosphatidylcholine discs, HDL(3), or in a lipid-free state binds to mSR-BI with high affinity (K(d) congruent with 5-8 microgram/ml). ApoA-I in each of these forms was efficiently cross-linked to cell surface mSR-BI, indicating that direct protein-protein contacts are the predominant feature that drives the interaction between HDL and mSR-BI. When complexed with dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine, the N-terminal and C-terminal CNBr fragments of apoA-I each bound to SR-BI in a saturable, high affinity manner, and each cross-linked efficiently to mSR-BI. Thus, mSR-BI recognizes multiple sites in apoA-I. A model class A amphipathic alpha-helix, 37pA, also showed high affinity binding and cross-linking to mSR-BI. These studies identify the amphipathic alpha-helix as a recognition motif for SR-BI and lead to the hypothesis that mSR-BI interacts with HDL via the amphipathic alpha-helical repeat units of apoA-I. This hypothesis explains the interaction of SR-BI with a wide variety of apolipoproteins via a specific secondary structure, the class A amphipathic alpha-helix, that is a common structural motif in the apolipoproteins of HDL, as well as LDL.  相似文献   

5.
Scavenger receptor, class B, type I (SR-BI) mediates selective uptake of high density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesteryl ester. SR-BI recognizes HDL, low density lipoprotein (LDL), exchangeable apolipoproteins, and protein-free lipid vesicles containing negatively charged phospholipids. Lipopolysaccharides (LPS) are highly glycosylated anionic phospholipids contributing to septic shock. Despite significant structural similarities between anionic phospholipids and LPS, the role of SR-BI in LPS uptake is unknown. Cla-1, the human SR-BI orthologue, was determined to be a LPS-binding protein and endocytic receptor mediating the binding and internalization of lipoprotein-free, monomerized LPS. LPS strongly competed with HDL, lipidfree apoA-I and apoA-II for HDL binding to the mouse RAW cells. Stably transfected HeLa cells expressing Cla-1-bound LPS with a Kd of about 16 microg/ml, and had a 3-4-fold increase in binding capacity and LPS uptake. Bodipy-labeled LPS uptake was found to initially accumulate in the plasma membrane and subsequently in a perinuclear region identified predominantly as the Golgi complex. Bodipy-LPS and Alexa-apoA-I had staining that colocalized on the cell surface and intracellularly indicating similar transport mechanisms. When associated with HDL, LPS uptake was increased in Cla-1 overexpressing HeLa cells by 5-10-fold. Cla-1-associated 3H-LPS uptake exceeded 125I-apolipoprotein uptake by 5-fold indicating a selective LPS uptake. Upon interacting with Cla-1 overexpressing HeLa cells, the complex (Bodipy-LPS/Alexa 488 apolipoprotein-labeled HDL) bound and was internalized as a holoparticle. Intracellularly, LPS and apolipoproteins were sorted to different intracellular compartments. With LPS-associated HDL, intracellular LPS co-localized predominantly with transferrin, indicating delivery to an endocytic recycling compartment. Our study reveals a close similarity between Cla-1-mediated selective LPS uptake and the recently described selective lipid sorting by rodent SR-BI. In summary, Cla-1 was found to bind and internalize monomerized and HDL-associated LPS, indicating that Cla-1 may play important role in septic shock by affecting LPS cellular uptake and clearance.  相似文献   

6.
CD36 and scavenger receptor class B, type I (SR-BI) are both class B scavenger receptors that recognize a broad variety of ligands, including oxidized low density lipoprotein (oxLDL), HDL, anionic phospholipids, and apoptotic cells. In this study we investigated the role of mouse CD36 (mCD36) as a physiological lipoprotein receptor. We compared the association of various lipoprotein particles with mCD36 and mSR-BI expressed in COS cells by adenovirus-mediated gene transfer. mCD36 bound human oxLDL and mouse HDL with high affinity. Human LDL bound poorly to mCD36, indicating that mCD36 is unlikely to play a significant role in LDL metabolism. The ability of mCD36 to mediate the selective uptake of cholesteryl esters (CE) from receptor-bound HDL was assessed. In comparison with mSR-BI, mCD36 inefficiently mediated the selective uptake of CE. Hepatic overexpression of mCD36 in C57BL/6 mice by adenovirus-mediated gene transfer did not result in significant alterations in plasma LDL and HDL levels. We conclude that mCD36, while able to bind HDL with high affinity, does not contribute significantly to HDL or LDL metabolism.  相似文献   

7.
As human choriocarcinoma cells display many of the biochemical and morphological characteristics reported for in utero invasive trophoblast cells we have studied cholesterol supply from high density lipoproteins (HDL) to these cells. Binding properties of 125I-labeled HDL subclass 3 (HDL3) at 4 degrees C were similar for BeWo, JAr, and Jeg3 choriocarcinoma cell lines while degradation rates at 37 degrees C were highest for BeWo. Calculating the selective cholesteryl ester (CE)-uptake as the difference between specific cell association of [3H]CE-labeled HDL3 and holoparticle association of 125I-labeled HDL3 revealed that in BeWo cells, the selective CE-uptake was slightly lower than holoparticle association. However, the pronounced capacity for specific cell association of [3H]CE-HDL3 and selective [3H]CE-uptake in excess of HDL3-holoparticle association, and cAMP-mediated enhanced cell association of [3H]CE-HDL3 in JAr and Jeg3 suggested the scavenger receptor class B, type I (SR-BI) to be responsible for this pathway. Abundant expression of SR-BI (but not SR-BII, a splice variant of SR-BI) could be observed in JAr and Jeg3 but not in BeWo cells using RT-PCR, Northern and Western blot analysis, and immunocytochemical technique. Adenovirus-mediated overexpression of SR-BI in all three choriocarcinoma cell lines resulted in an enhanced capacity for cell association of [3H]CE-HDL3 (20-fold in BeWo; fivefold in JAr and Jeg3). The fact that exogenous HDL3 remarkably increases proliferation in JAr and Jeg3 supports the notion that selective CE-uptake and subsequent intracellular generation of cholesterol is coupled to cellular growth. From our findings we propose that JAr and Jeg3 cells serve as a suitable in vitro model to study selective CE-supply to human placental cells.  相似文献   

8.
The murine class B, type I scavenger receptor mSR-BI is a high and low density lipoprotein (HDL and LDL) receptor that mediates selective uptake of cholesteryl esters. Here we describe a reconstituted phospholipid/cholesterol liposome assay of the binding and selective uptake activities of SR-BI derived from detergent-solubilized cells. The assay, employing lysates from epitope-tagged receptor (mSR-BI-t1)-expressing mammalian and insect cells, recapitulated many features of SR-BI activity in intact cells, including high affinity and saturable (125)I-HDL binding, selective lipid uptake from [(3)H]cholesteryl ether-labeled HDL, and poor inhibition of HDL receptor activity by LDL. The novel properties of a mutated receptor (Q402R/Q418R, normal LDL binding but loss of most HDL binding) were reproduced in the assay, as was the ability of the SR-BI homologue CD36 to bind HDL but not mediate efficient lipid uptake. In this assay, essentially homogeneously pure mSR-BI-t1, prepared by single-step immunoaffinity chromatography, mediated high affinity HDL binding and efficient selective lipid uptake from HDL. Thus, SR-BI-mediated HDL binding and selective lipid uptake are intrinsic properties of the receptor that do not require the intervention of other proteins or specific cellular structures or compartments.  相似文献   

9.
The scavenger receptor class B, type I (SR-BI) mediates the cellular selective uptake of cholesteryl esters and other lipids from high-density lipoproteins (HDL) and low-density lipoproteins (LDL). This process, unlike classical receptor-mediated endocytosis, does not result in lipoprotein degradation. Instead, the lipid depleted particles are released into the medium. Here we show that selective lipid uptake mediated by murine SR-BI can be uncoupled from the endocytosis of HDL or LDL particles. We found that blocking selective lipid uptake by incubating cells with the small chemical inhibitors BLT-1 or BLT-4 did not affect endocytosis of HDL. Similarly, blocking endocytosis by hyperosmotic sucrose or K+ depletion did not prevent selective lipid uptake from HDL or LDL. These findings suggest that mSR-BI-mediated selective uptake occurs at the cell surface upon the association of lipoproteins with mSR-BI and does not require endocytosis of HDL or LDL particles.  相似文献   

10.
Scavenger receptor, class B, type I (SR-BI) mediates binding and internalization of a variety of lipoprotein and nonlipoprotein ligands, including HDL. Studies in genetically engineered mice revealed that SR-BI plays an important role in HDL reverse cholesterol transport and protection against atherosclerosis. Understanding how SR-BI's function is regulated may reveal new approaches to therapeutic intervention in atherosclerosis and heart disease. We utilized a model cell system to explore pathways involved in SR-BI-mediated lipid uptake from and signaling in response to distinct lipoprotein ligands: the physiological ligand, HDL, and a model ligand, acetyl LDL (AcLDL). In Chinese hamster ovary-derived cells, murine SR-BI (mSR-BI) mediates lipid uptake via distinct pathways that are dependent on the lipoprotein ligand. Furthermore, HDL and AcLDL activate distinct signaling pathways. Finally, mSR-BI-mediated selective lipid uptake versus endocytic uptake are differentially regulated by protein kinase signaling pathways. The protein kinase C (PKC) activator PMA and the phosphatidyl inositol 3-kinase inhibitor wortmannin increase the degree of mSR-BI-mediated selective lipid uptake, whereas a PKC inhibitor has the opposite effect. These data demonstrate that SR-BI's selective lipid uptake activity can be acutely regulated by intracellular signaling cascades, some of which can originate from HDL binding to murine SR-BI itself.  相似文献   

11.
12.
The class B, type I scavenger receptor (SR-BI) mediates the selective uptake of high density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesteryl esters and the efflux of free cholesterol. SR-BI is predominantly associated with caveolae in Chinese hamster ovary cells. The caveola protein, caveolin-1, binds to cholesterol and is involved in intracellular cholesterol trafficking. We previously demonstrated a correlative increase in caveolin-1 expression and the selective uptake of HDL cholesteryl esters in phorbol ester-induced differentiated THP-1 cells. The goal of the present study was to determine if the expression of caveolin-1 is the causative factor in increasing selective cholesteryl ester uptake in macrophages. To test this, we established RAW and J-774 cell lines that stably expressed caveolin-1. Transfection with caveolin-1 cDNA did not alter the amount of 125I-labeled HDL that associated with the cells, although selective uptake of HDL [3H]cholesteryl ether was decreased by approximately 50%. The amount of [3H]cholesterol effluxed to HDL was not affected by caveolin-1. To directly address whether caveolin-1 inhibits SR-BI-dependent selective cholesteryl ester uptake, we overexpressed caveolin-1 by adenoviral vector gene transfer in Chinese hamster ovary cells stably transfected with SR-BI. Caveolin-1 inhibited the selective uptake of HDL [3H]cholesteryl ether by 50-60% of control values without altering the extent of cell associated HDL. We next used blocking antibodies to CD36 and SR-BI to demonstrate that the increase in selective [3H]cholesteryl ether uptake previously seen in differentiated THP-1 cells was independent of SR-BI. Finally, we used beta-cyclodextrin and caveolin overexpression to demonstrate that caveolae depleted of cholesterol facilitate SR-BI-dependent selective cholesteryl ester uptake and caveolae containing excess cholesterol inhibit uptake. We conclude that caveolin-1 is a novel negative regulator of SR-BI-dependent selective cholesteryl ester uptake.  相似文献   

13.
The murine class B, type I scavenger receptor (mSR-BI) is a receptor for both high density lipoprotein (HDL) and low density lipoprotein (LDL) and mediates selective, rather than endocytic, uptake of lipoprotein lipid. We have developed a "retrovirus library-based activity dissection" method to generate mSR-BI mutants in which some, but not all, of the activities of this multifunctional protein have been disrupted. This method employs three techniques: 1) efficient in vitro cDNA mutagenesis (here error-prone PCR was used), 2) efficient retroviral delivery and high expression of single mutant cDNAs into individual cells, and 3) isolation of infected cells expressing the desired mutant phenotype using high sensitivity positive/negative screening by two-color fluorescence-activated cell sorting. A set of mutants, all having arginine substitutions at two common sites (positions 402 or 401 and position 418), were isolated and characterized. Mutation at either site alone did not generate as strong a mutant phenotype (loss of DiI uptake from DiI-HDL) as did the double mutations. "Activity-dissected" double mutants were as effective as wild-type mSR-BI in functioning as LDL receptors, mediating high affinity LDL binding and uptake of metabolically active cholesterol from LDL, but they lost most of their corresponding HDL receptor activity. Thus, these mutants provide support for the proposal that the interaction of SR-BI with HDL differs from that with LDL. Examination of the in vivo function of such mutants may provide insights into the differential roles of the LDL and HDL receptor activities of SR-BI in normal lipoprotein metabolism and in SR-BI's ability to protect against atherosclerosis.  相似文献   

14.
Scavenger receptor class B type I (SR-BI) mediates the selective uptake of HDL cholesteryl esters (CEs) by the liver. LPL promotes this selective lipid uptake independent of lipolysis. In this study, the role of SR-BI in the mechanism of this LPL-mediated increase in selective CE uptake was explored. Baby hamster kidney (BHK) cells were transfected with the SR-BI cDNA, and significant SR-BI expression could be detected in immunoblots, whereas no SR-BI was visualized in control cells. Y1-BS1 murine adrenocortical cells were cultured without or with adrenocorticotropic hormone, and cells with no detectable or with SR-BI were obtained. These cells incubated without or with LPL in medium containing 125I/[3H]cholesteryl oleyl ether- labeled HDL3; tetrahydrolipstatin inhibited the catalytic activity of LPL. In BHK and in Y1-BS1 cells without or with SR-BI expression, apparent HDL3 selective CE uptake ([3H]CEt - 125I) was detectable. Cellular SR-BI expression promoted HDL3 selective CE uptake by approximately 250-1,900%. In BHK or Y1-BS1 cells, LPL mediated an increase in apparent selective CE uptake. Quantitatively, this stimulating LPL effect was very similar in control cells and in cells with SR-BI expression. The uptake of radiolabeled HDL3 was also investigated in human embryonal kidney 293 (HEK 293) cells that are an established SR-BI-deficient cell model. LPL stimulated [3H]cholesteryl oleyl ether uptake from labeled HDL3 by HEK 293 cells substantially, showing that LPL can induce selective CE uptake from HDL3 independent of SR-BI. To explore the role of cell surface proteoglycans on lipoprotein uptake, we induced proteoglycan deficiency by heparinase treatment. Proteoglycan deficiency decreased the LPL-mediated promotion of HDL3 selective CE uptake. In summary, evidence is presented that the stimulating effect of LPL on HDL3 selective CE uptake is independent of SR-BI and lipolysis. However, cell surface proteoglycans are required for the LPL action on selective CE uptake. It is suggested that pathways distinct from SR-BI mediate selective CE uptake from HDL.  相似文献   

15.
High density lipoprotein (HDL) can protect low density lipoprotein (LDL) against oxidation. Oxidized cholesterol esters from LDL can be transferred to HDL and efficiently and selectively removed from the blood circulation by the liver and adrenal in vivo. In the present study, we investigated whether scavenger receptor BI (SR-BI) is responsible for this process. At 30 min after injection, the selective uptake of oxidized cholesterol esters from HDL for liver and adrenal was 2.3- and 2.6-fold higher, respectively, than for native cholesterol esters, whereas other tissues showed no significant difference. The selective uptake of oxidized cholesterol esters from HDL by isolated liver parenchymal cells could be blocked for 75% by oxidized LDL and for 50% by phosphatidylserine liposomes, both of which are known substrates of SR-BI. In vivo uptake of oxidized cholesterol esters from HDL by parenchymal cells decreased by 64 and 81% when rats were treated with estradiol and a high cholesterol diet, respectively, whereas Kupffer cells showed 660 and 475% increases, respectively. These contrasting changes in oxidized cholesterol ester uptake were accompanied by similar contrasting changes in SR-BI expression of parenchymal and Kupffer cells. The rates of SR-BI-mediated selective uptake of oxidized and native cholesterol esters were analyzed in SR-BI-transfected Chinese hamster ovary cells. SR-BI-mediated selective uptake was 3.4-fold higher for oxidized than for native cholesterol esters (30 min of incubation). It is concluded that in addition to the selective uptake of native cholesterol esters, SR-BI is responsible for the highly efficient selective uptake of oxidized cholesterol esters from HDL and thus forms an essential mediator in the HDL-associated protection system for atherogenic oxidized cholesterol esters.  相似文献   

16.
The murine class B, type I scavenger receptor mSR-BI, a high density lipoprotein (HDL) receptor that mediates selective uptake of HDL lipids, contains 11 potential N-linked glycosylation sites and unknown numbers of both endoglycosidase H-sensitive and -resistant oligosaccharides. We have examined the consequences of mutating each of these sites (Asn --> Gln or Thr --> Ala) on post-translational processing of mSR-BI, cell surface expression, and HDL binding and lipid transport activities. All 11 sites were glycosylated; however, disruption of only two (Asn-108 and Asn-173) substantially altered expression and function. There was very little detectable post-translational processing of these two mutants to endoglycosidase H resistance and very low cell surface expression, suggesting that oligosaccharide modification at these sites apparently plays an important role in endoplasmic reticulum folding and/or intracellular transport. Strikingly, although the low levels of the 108 and 173 mutants that were expressed on the cell surface exhibited a marked reduction in their ability to transfer lipids from HDL to cells, they nevertheless bound nearly normal amounts of HDL. Indeed, the affinity of (125)I-HDL binding to the 173 mutant was similar to that of the wild-type receptor. Thus, N-linked glycosylation can influence both the intracellular transport and lipid-transporter activity of SR-BI. The ability to uncouple the HDL binding and lipid transport activities of mSR-BI by in vitro mutagenesis should provide a powerful tool for further analysis of the mechanism of SR-BI-mediated selective lipid uptake.  相似文献   

17.
Hepatoma cell lines serve as a suitable model to study hepatic clearance of lipoprotein-associated cholesteryl esters (CEs). The present study aimed at investigating holoparticle-association of and selective CE-uptake from human high density lipoprotein subclass 3 (HDL3) by non-malignant adult (Chang-liver) and non-malignant fetal (WRL-68) epithelial cell lines as well as a hepatocellular carcinoma (HUH-7) cell line. Binding properties of 125I-HDL3 at 4 and 37 degrees C were similar for all three cell lines while degradation rates were highest for Chang-liver cells. Calculating the selective uptake of HDL3-associated CEs as the difference between [3H]CE- and 125I-HDL3 cell-association revealed that the selective lipid uptake and holoparticle-association was similar in Chang-liver while in WRL-68 and HUH-7 cells pronounced capacity for lipid tracer uptake in excess of holoparticle uptake was measured. Using RT-PCR, Northern and Western blot analysis, as well as immunocytochemical technique pronounced expression of scavenger receptor class B, type I (SR-BI) but not SR-BII (a splice variant of SR-BI less efficient for selective CE-uptake than SR-BI) could be identified in HUH-7 and WRL-68 cells. A polyclonal antiserum raised against SR-BI significantly decreased cell-association of [3H]CE-HDL3 in HUH-7 and WRL-68. The present findings suggest that the capacity for selective cholesteryl ester-uptake from high density lipoprotein by malignant and normal epithelial cells from the liver depends on expression of the scavenger receptor class B, type I.  相似文献   

18.
19.
Hepatic lipase (HL) plays a major role in high-density lipoprotein (HDL) metabolism both as a lipolytic enzyme and as a ligand. To investigate whether HL enhances the uptake of HDL-cholesteryl ester (CE) via the newly described scavenger receptor BI (SR-BI), we measured the effects of expressing HL and SR-BI on HDL-cell association as well as uptake of 125I-labeled apoA-I and [3H]CE-HDL, by embryonal kidney 293 cells. As expected, HDL cell association and CE selective uptake were increased in SR-BI transfected cells by 2- and 4-fold, respectively, compared to controls (P < 0.001). Cells transfected with HL alone or in combination with SR-BI expressed similar amounts of HL, 20% of which was bound to cell surface proteoglycans. HL alone increased HDL cell association by 2-fold but had no effect on HDL-CE uptake in 293 cells. However, in cells expressing SR-BI, HL further enhanced the selective uptake of CE from HDL by 3-fold (P < 0.001). To determine whether the lipolytic and/or ligand function of HL are required in this process, we generated a catalytically inactive form of HL (HL-145G). Cells co-transfected with HL-145G and SR-BI increased their HDL cell association and HDL-CE selective uptake by 1.4-fold compared to cells expressing SR-BI only (P < 0.03). Heparin abolished the effect of HL-145G on SR-BI-mediated HDL-CE selective uptake.Thus, the enhanced uptake of HDL-CE by HL is mediated by both its ligand role, which requires interaction with proteoglycans, and by lipolysis with subsequent HDL particle remodeling. These results establish HL as a major modulator of SR-BI mediated selective uptake of HDL-CE.  相似文献   

20.
Scavenger receptor class B type I (SR-BI) mediates the selective uptake of HDL cholesteryl esters (CEs) by the liver. Hepatic lipase (HL) promotes this lipid uptake independent from lipolysis. The role of SR-BI in this HL-mediated increase in selective CE uptake was explored. Baby hamster kidney (BHK) cells were transfected with the SR-BI cDNA yielding cells with SR-BI expression, whereas no SR-BI was detected in control cells. These cells were incubated in medium containing 125I [3H]cholesteryl oleyl ether-labeled HDL3 (d = 1.125-1.21 g/ml) and HL was absent or present. Tetrahydrolipstatin (THL) blocked lipolysis. In control BHK cells and in BHK cells with SR-BI, HDL3 selective CE uptake (3H-125I) was detectable and SR-BI promoted this uptake. In both cell types, HL mediated an increase in selective CE uptake from HDL3. Quantitatively, this HL effect was similar in control BHK cells and in BHK cells with SR-BI. These results suggest that HL promotes selective uptake independent from SR-BI. To investigate the role of cell surface proteoglycans on the HL-mediated HDL3 uptake, proteoglycan deficiency was induced by heparinase digestion. Proteoglycan deficiency decreased the HL-mediated promotion of selective CE uptake. In summary, the stimulating HL effect on HDL selective CE uptake is independent from SR-BI and lipolysis. Proteoglycans are a requisite for the HL action on selective uptake. Results suggest that (a) pathway(s) distinct from SR-BI mediate(s) selective CE uptake from HDL.  相似文献   

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