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1.
This study examines the effects of cholestyramine (2 g/day) on the plasma clearance and tissue uptake of human low density lipoprotein (LDL) in rabbits. 1,2-Cyclohexanedione modification of human LDL abolishes its recognition by high affinity cell membrane receptors in vitro and delays its plasma clearance in comparison to native LDL. Consequently, the difference between the fractional rates of catabolism of simultaneously injected native and cyclohexanedione-treated LDL is an index of in vivo receptor-mediated clearance of the lipoprotein. When human 125I-LDL and 131I-cyclohexanedione-treated LDL were injected into rabbits, 44% of the lipoprotein was cleared from the plasma by the receptor mechanism. Various tissues were removed from the animals at the end of the turnover study and their relative uptakes of 125I native and 131I-cyclohexanedione-treated LDL were measured. All exhibited receptor activity to some extent, incorporating more native than cyclohexanedione-modified LDL. The greatest receptor activity per g of tissue was found in lymph nodes, spleen, and liver and, in terms of whole organ uptake, the liver played a major role in LDL catabolism. Treatment of the rabbits with cholestyramine lowered the circulating LDL cholesterol level by promoting its clearance (120%, p < 0.001) via the receptor pathway. This was associated with a virtual doubling of receptor-mediated incorporation of the lipoprotein into the liver. These results suggest that the drain which cholestyramine induces in the hepatic cholesterol pool promotes LDL receptor activity in this organ and thereby lowers the level of circulating LDL.  相似文献   

2.
The LDL receptor pathway, which was delineated in cultured cells, is now known to operate in vivo. In this study we have measured the plasma clearances and tissue uptakes of native and chemically modified (1,2-cyclohexanedione-treated or reductively methylated) LDL in rabbits in order to determine the response of the pathway to a high-cholesterol diet. 1 week on the diet increased circulating LDL and suppressed its receptor-mediated plasma clearance and uptake into all tissues. The fractional catabolic rate of the lipoprotein via the receptor-independent route also fell. Continuation of the feeding program for 12 weeks accentuated these changes and virtually eliminated receptor uptake into all tissues so that the plasma decay curves of native and cyclohexanedione-treated LDL were superimposable. Lipoprotein assimilation by the aorta, however, did not follow this general trend. This tissue, after 12 weeks, was variably infiltrated by atheromatous deposits and the appearance of these lesions was associated with a substantial increase in the relative uptakes of both native and chemically modified (cyclohexanedione-treated and reductively methylated) LDL. We concluded (a) that expansion of tissue cholesterol pools virtually abolishes LDL receptor activity in rabbits; and (b) that LDL assimilation (both apparently receptor-mediated and receptor-independent) paradoxically increases at sites where the aorta is affected by atheromatous lesions.  相似文献   

3.
These studies were undertaken to determine the role of receptor-independent low density lipoprotein (LDL) transport in cholesterol balance across individual tissues and the whole animal. Homologous LDL, which measures total LDL transport, and methylated heterologous LDL, which measures receptor-independent LDL uptake, were cleared from the plasma at very different rates in the NZ control rabbit (3,900 and 1,010 microliter/hr per kg, respectively) whereas in the WHHL rabbit both preparations were cleared at essentially the same rate (approximately 1,070 microliter/hr per kg). Receptor-independent LDL clearance was detected in all tissues of the NZ control rabbit and these varied from 32 (spleen) to less than 0.5 (skeletal muscle) microliter/hr per g. In contrast, receptor-dependent LDL uptake was found in only about half of these same organs. In the WHHL rabbit, the rates of receptor-independent LDL transport were the same as in the NZ control rabbit, but no receptor-dependent uptake was detected. Using these clearance values it was calculated that in the control rabbit nearly 70% of LDL-cholesterol was removed from the plasma by the liver and 89% of this was receptor-mediated. With loss of receptor activity, however, the burden of LDL degradation was shifted away from the liver so that approximately 70% of LDL-cholesterol uptake took place in the extra-hepatic tissues of the WHHL rabbit. Thus, in the normal animal, the primary function of receptor-dependent LDL transport is to promote the rapid uptake and disposal of plasma LDL by the liver. In the absence of such receptor activity, cholesterol balance across most individual organs and the whole animal remains essentially normal and is mediated by the receptor-independent process. Because of the much lower absolute clearance rates manifested by this transport mechanism, however, substantial and predictable elevations in the circulating plasma LDL-cholesterol levels are required to maintain this balance.  相似文献   

4.
The lipoprotein-mediated regulation of 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-(HMG-) CoA reductase in cultured mouse peritoneal macrophages has been investigated. In contrast to what has been reported for other cells, HMG-CoA reductase activity is not suppressed by normal serum or by normal low density lipoproteins (LDL) from humans or dogs. Suppression of reductase activity occurred when cells were cultured in the presence of beta-migrating very low density lipoproteins (beta-VLDL) or LDL from hypercholesterolaemic dogs, or LDL modified by acetoacetylation. Human beta-VLDL from an atypical type III hyperlipoproteinaemic patient was also effective, as was apolipoprotein (apo) E-containing high density lipoproteins (HDL) from cholesterol-fed dogs (apo-E HDLc). The results indicate that cholesterol biosynthesis in mouse peritoneal macrophages is regulated by lipoprotein cholesterol entering via receptor-mediated endocytosis. Normal LDL were not effective because of the poor binding and uptake of these lipoproteins by the apo-B, E (LDL) receptor. Only beta-VLDL, apo-E HDLc, and hypercholesterolaemic LDL were avidly taken up by this receptor and were able to suppress HMG-CoA reductase. Acetoacetylated LDL were internalized via the acetyl-LDL (scavenger) receptor. Thus, mouse macrophages differ from human fibroblasts and smooth muscle cells in their physiological regulation of cholesterogenesis.  相似文献   

5.
The contribution of receptor-dependent and receptor-independent mechanisms for low density lipoprotein (LDL) clearance in vivo was determined in White Carneau and Show Racer pigeons fed either cholesterol free or cholesterol containing diets. The methylation of pigeon LDL resulted in the inhibition of recognition by the LDL receptor which allowed its use as a tracer of receptor-independent clearance. The fractional catabolic rate (FCR) of radiolabeled LDL in 20 control pigeons (means +/- S.E., 0.277 +/- 0.013 pools/h) was approximately seven times faster than for methylated LDL indicating that 86% of the total LDL clearance occurred by a receptor-mediated process. Total LDL clearance was reduced by 27% (FCR = 0.202 +/- 0.012 pools/h) in 14 cholesterol-fed pigeons, but receptor-mediated mechanisms were still responsible for 80% of the total LDL clearance. LDL uptake by individual tissues was measured using the residualizing label 125I-tyramine cellobiose. The liver was the primary site of LDL clearance in both control and cholesterol-fed birds. LDL receptors were active in every tissue examined and accounted for over 85% of the LDL clearance in the liver and over 90% in the adrenal gland. Consistent with the whole body LDL clearance findings, cholesterol-feeding did not significantly reduce receptor-mediated clearance of 125I-tyramine cellobiose-LDL by the liver or any of the other tissues. Hepatic sterol synthesis, however, was reduced by greater than 90% in cholesterol-fed animals. These data are consistent with the conclusion that LDL clearance in vivo in pigeons is mediated primarily by an LDL receptor-like mechanism that shows little down-regulation with hypercholesterolemia even though cholesterol synthesis is efficiently down-regulated.  相似文献   

6.
W Xiao  L Wang  J M Ryan  A Pater  H Liu 《Radiation research》1999,152(3):250-256
The feasibility of using low-density lipoprotein (LDL) to deliver cytotoxic drugs to tumor cells has been explored since the 1980s, when cells of a number of cancer cell lines were found to have higher LDL receptor activity than normal cells. Such differential uptake between tumor and normal cells may provide a unique opportunity to use LDL as a tumor-specific carrier of radiopharmaceuticals for the clinical management of cancer. In this study, an (125)I-labeled hexa-iodinated diglyceride analog, 1, 3-dihydroxypropan-2-one 1,3-diiopanoate (DPIP), was synthesized and incorporated into LDL using a fusion technique. It was found that approximately 500 [(125)I] DPIP molecules were incorporated into each LDL particle. Cells of three human cervical tumor cell lines, HeLa, SiHa and C-33A, were used to examine the cellular uptake of the [(125)I]DPIP-LDL conjugate. It was shown that the [(125)I]DPIP-LDL conjugate was specifically bound to and taken up by cervical tumor cells through an LDL receptor-mediated endocytosis pathway. The results suggest that LDL may be a selective carrier for delivering hydrophobic radiopharmaceuticals to cancer cells and particularly for the diagnosis of cervical tumors.  相似文献   

7.
Low density lipoprotein (LDL) internalization by mutant type C Niemann-Pick (NPC) fibroblasts results in uptake of excess total cholesterol. Uptake of excess lipoprotein cholesterol appears to be mediated by the specific LDL receptor pathway. Associated with excessive LDL-cholesterol uptake is a lesion in early intracellular cholesteryl ester synthesis. In vitro acylCoA:cholesterol acyltransferase activity is normal in cell-free extracts of mutant cells. The ability of exogenous sterols to enhance intracellular esterification of [3H]mevalonate-derived [3H]cholesterol was severely limited in mutant cell cultures suggesting that in vivo activation and/or expression of activated acylCoA:cholesterol acyltransferase may be compromised by the primary mutation of type C Niemann-Pick disease. After 2 days of LDL uptake, rates of intracellular cholesteryl ester synthesis in mutant cells paralleled the rates of esterification in normal cells suggesting that specific early in vivo expression of the acyltransferase may be affected in this disorder.  相似文献   

8.
1. Hepatic uptake of low-density lipoprotein (LDL) in parenchymal cells and non-parenchymal cells was studied in control-fed and cholesterol-fed rabbits after intravenous injection of radioiodinated native LDL (125I-TC-LDL) and methylated LDL (131I-TC-MetLDL). 2. LDL was taken up by rabbit liver parenchymal cells, as well as by endothelial and Kupffer cells. Parenchymal cells, however, were responsible for 92% of the hepatic LDL uptake. 3. Of LDL in the hepatocytes, 89% was taken up via the B,E receptor, whereas 16% and 32% of the uptake of LDL in liver endothelial cells and Kupffer cells, respectively, was B,E receptor-dependent. 4. Cholesterol feeding markedly reduced B,E receptor-mediated uptake of LDL in parenchymal liver cells and in Kupffer cells, to 19% and 29% of controls, respectively. Total uptake of LDL in liver endothelial cells was increased about 2-fold. This increased uptake is probably mediated via the scavenger receptor. The B,E receptor-independent association of LDL with parenchymal cells was not affected by the cholesterol feeding. 5. It is concluded that the B,E receptor is located in parenchymal as well as in the non-parenchymal rabbit liver cells, and that this receptor is down-regulated by cholesterol feeding. Parenchymal cells are the main site of hepatic uptake of LDL, both under normal conditions and when the number of B,E receptors is down-regulated by cholesterol feeding. In addition, LDL is taken up by B,E receptor-independent mechanism(s) in rabbit liver parenchymal, endothelial and Kupffer cells. The non-parenchymal liver cells may play a quantitatively important role when the concentration of circulating LDL is maintained at a high level in plasma, being responsible for 26% of hepatic uptake of LDL in cholesterol-fed rabbits as compared with 8% in control-fed rabbits. The proportion of hepatic LDL uptake in endothelial cells was greater than 5-fold higher in the diet-induced hypercholesterolaemic rabbits than in controls.  相似文献   

9.
Mechanisms and optimization of in vivo delivery of lipophilic siRNAs   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
Cholesterol-conjugated siRNAs can silence gene expression in vivo. Here we synthesize a variety of lipophilic siRNAs and use them to elucidate the requirements for siRNA delivery in vivo. We show that conjugation to bile acids and long-chain fatty acids, in addition to cholesterol, mediates siRNA uptake into cells and gene silencing in vivo. Efficient and selective uptake of these siRNA conjugates depends on interactions with lipoprotein particles, lipoprotein receptors and transmembrane proteins. High-density lipoprotein (HDL) directs siRNA delivery into liver, gut, kidney and steroidogenic organs, whereas low-density lipoprotein (LDL) targets siRNA primarily to the liver. LDL-receptor expression is essential for siRNA delivery by LDL particles, and SR-BI receptor expression is required for uptake of HDL-bound siRNAs. Cellular uptake also requires the mammalian homolog of the Caenorhabditis elegans transmembrane protein Sid1. Our results demonstrate that conjugation to lipophilic molecules enables effective siRNA uptake through a common mechanism that can be exploited to optimize therapeutic siRNA delivery.  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
Human hepatoma HepG2 cells were used to study the effects of cholesterol loading and depletion on apolipoprotein B (apoB) secretion and low-density lipoprotein (LDL) receptor activity. Exposure of HepG2 cells to cholesterol and oleic acid, which elevated intracellular cholesterol levels, stimulated apoB secretion and reduced receptor-mediated uptake of LDL, whereas recombinant complexes of apolipoprotein A-I with dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine, which depleted the cellular cholesterol pool, inhibited apoB secretion and up-regulated LDL receptors. Significant negative correlation (r = -0.92, P less than 0.001) between the levels of apoB secretion and LDL uptake was found. These data suggest that the cholesterol content of the cells may induce concomitant changes in apoB secretion and LDL receptor activity.  相似文献   

12.
Human blood monocytes cultured in medium containing 20% whole serum showed the greatest activity of 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-CoA (HMG-CoA) reductase and [14C]acetate incorporation into non-saponifiable lipids around the 7th day after seeding, the period of greatest growth. Although there was enough low-density lipoprotein (LDL) in the medium to saturate the LDL receptors that were expressed by normal cells at that time, HMG-CoA reductase activity and acetate incorporation were as high in normal cells as in cells from familial-hypercholesterolaemic (FH) patients. Both the addition of extra LDL, which interacted with the cells by non-saturable processes, and receptor-mediated uptake of acetylated LDL significantly reduced reductase activity and increased incorporation of [14C]oleate into cholesteryl esters in normal cells and cells from FH patients ('FH cells'), and reduced the expression of LDL receptors in normal cells. Pre-incubation for 20h in lipoprotein-deficient medium apparently increased the number of LDL receptors expressed by normal cells but reduced the activity of HMG-CoA reductase in both normal and FH cells. During subsequent incubations the same rate of degradation of acetylated LDL and of non-saturable degradation of LDL by FH cells was associated with the same reduction in HMG-CoA reductase activity, although LDL produced a much smaller stimulation of oleate incorporation into cholesteryl esters. In normal cells pre-incubated without lipoproteins, receptor-mediated uptake of LDL could abolish reductase activity and the expression of LDL receptors. The results suggested that in these cells, receptor-mediated uptake of LDL might have a greater effect on reductase activity and LDL receptors than the equivalent uptake of acetylated LDL. It is proposed that endogenous synthesis is an important source of cholesterol for growth of normal cells, and that the site at which cholesterol is deposited in the cells may determine the nature and extent of the metabolic events that follow.  相似文献   

13.
These studies were undertaken to measure rates of synthesis of digitonin-precipitable sterols in vivo and in vitro in control rabbits (New Zealand (NZ) control) and in homozygous Watanabe heritable hyperlipidemic rabbits (WHHL) that lack receptors for low density lipoproteins (LDL). The plasma cholesterol concentration in NZ control fetuses equaled 79 mg/dl, rose to 315 mg/dl 12 days after birth, and fell to 80 mg/dl in young adult animals. At these same ages, cholesterol concentrations in the WHHL animals equal 315, 625, and 715 mg/dl, respectively. The rate of whole animal sterol synthesis in vivo, expressed as the mumol of [3H]water incorporated into sterols per hr per kg of body weight, was lower in the WHHL animals than in the NZ controls both in the fetuses (108 vs 176) and in the adult animals (48 vs 66). In adult NZ controls the content of newly synthesized sterols (rate of sterol synthesis) per g of tissue was highest in the liver (538 nmol/g per hr), adrenal gland (438), small bowel (371), and ovary (225) while lower rates of synthesis were found in 15 other tissues. In the WHHL rabbits a higher content of [3H]sterols was found only in the adrenal gland (2,215) while synthesis was suppressed in the liver (310), colon, lung, and kidney, and was unchanged in the remaining organs. These findings were confirmed by measurements of rates of sterol synthesis in the same tissues in vitro. When whole organ weight was taken into consideration, the tissues that were the major contributors to whole body sterol synthesis in both types of rabbits were liver, small bowel, skin, and carcass. However, it was the lower rate of synthesis in the liver of the WHHL animals that alone accounted for the lower rate of whole animal sterol synthesis seen in these rabbits. These studies demonstrate that in WHHL animals that lack LDL receptors and that have very high levels of circulating LDL cholesterol, the rate of cholesterol synthesis in nearly all tissues is normal but in the liver is significantly suppressed. Only the adrenal gland manifested enhanced synthesis. Such findings suggest that in the WHHL rabbit where LDL receptor activity is reduced and plasma LDL levels rise, mechanisms other than receptor-mediated LDL uptake may act to deliver cholesterol to the cells of the various organs and to the liver.  相似文献   

14.
A new prototype of nanoconjugate, Polycefin, was synthesized for targeted delivery of antisense oligonucleotides and monoclonal antibodies to brain tumors. The macromolecular carrier contains: 1. biodegradable, nonimmunogenic, nontoxic beta-poly(L-malic acid) of microbial origin; 2. Morpholino antisense oligonucleotides targeting laminin alpha4 and beta1 chains of laminin-8, which is specifically overexpressed in glial brain tumors; 3. monoclonal anti-transferrin receptor antibody for specific tissue targeting; 4. oligonucleotide releasing disulfide units; 5. L-valine containing, pH-sensitive membrane disrupting unit(s), 6. protective poly(ethylene glycol); 7. a fluorescent dye (optional). Highly purified modules were conjugated directly with N-hydroxysuccinimidyl ester-activated beta-poly(L-malic acid) at pendant carboxyl groups or at thiol containing spacers via thioether and disulfide bonds. Products were chemically validated by physical, chemical, and functional tests. In vitro experiments using two human glioma cell lines U87MG and T98G demonstrated that Polycefin was delivered into the tumor cells by a receptor-mediated endocytosis mechanism and was able to inhibit the synthesis of laminin-8 alpha4 and beta1 chains at the same time. Inhibition of laminin-8 expression was in agreement with the designed endosomal membrane disruption and drug releasing activity. In vivo imaging showed the accumulation of intravenously injected Polycefin in brain tumor tissue via the antibody-targeted transferrin receptor-mediated endosomal pathway in addition to a less efficient mechanism known for high molecular mass biopolymers as enhanced permeability and retention effect. Polycefin was nontoxic to normal and tumor astrocytes in a wide range of concentrations, accumulated in brain tumor, and could be used for specific targeting of several biomarkers simultaneously.  相似文献   

15.
These studies explored the roles of receptor-mediated and bulk-phase endocytosis as well as macrophage infiltration in the accumulation of cholesterol in the mouse with Niemann-Pick type C (NPC) disease. Uptake of LDL-cholesterol varied from 514 microg/day in the liver to zero in the central nervous system. In animals lacking LDL receptors, liver uptake remained about the same (411 microg/day), but more cholesterol was taken up in extrahepatic organs. This uptake was unaffected by the reductive methylation of LDL and consistent with bulk-phase endocytosis. All tissues accumulated cholesterol in mice lacking NPC1 function, but this accumulation was decreased in adrenal, unchanged in liver, and increased in organs like spleen and lung when LDL receptor function was also deleted. Over 56 days, the spleen and lung accumulated amounts of cholesterol greater than predicted, and these organs were heavily infiltrated with macrophages. This accumulation of both cholesterol and macrophages was increased by deleting LDL receptor function. These observations indicate that both receptor-mediated and bulk-phase endocytosis of lipoproteins, as well as macrophage infiltration, contribute to the cholesterol accumulation seen in NPC disease. These macrophages may also play a role in parenchymal cell death in this syndrome.  相似文献   

16.
The mechanism of hepatic catabolism of human low density lipoproteins (LDL) by human-derived hepatoma cell line HepG2 was studied. The binding of 125I-labeled LDL to HepG2 cells at 4 degrees C was time dependent and inhibited by excess unlabeled LDL. The specific binding was predominant at low concentrations of 125I-labeled LDL (less than 50 micrograms protein/ml), whereas the nonsaturable binding prevailed at higher concentrations of substrate. The cellular uptake and degradation of 125I-labeled LDL were curvilinear functions of substrate concentration. Preincubation of HepG2 cells with unlabeled LDL caused a 56% inhibition in the degradation of 125I-labeled LDL. Reductive methylation of unlabeled LDL abolished its ability to compete with 125I-labeled LDL for uptake and degradation. Chloroquine (50 microM) and colchicine (1 microM) inhibited the degradation of 125I-labeled LDL by 64% and 30%, respectively. The LDL catabolism by HepG2 cells suppressed de novo synthesis of cholesterol and enhanced cholesterol esterification; this stimulation was abolished by chloroquine. When tested at a similar content of apolipoprotein B, very low density lipoproteins (VLDL), LDL and high density lipoproteins (HDL) inhibited the catabolism of 125I-labeled LDL to the same degree, indicating that in HepG2 cells normal LDL are most probably recognized by the receptor via apolipoprotein B. The current study thus demonstrates that the catabolism of human LDL by HepG2 cells proceeds in part through a receptor-mediated mechanism.  相似文献   

17.
Elevated levels of low-density-lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) in the plasma are a well-established risk factor for the development of coronary heart disease. Plasma LDL-C levels are in part determined by the rate at which LDL particles are removed from the bloodstream by hepatic uptake. The uptake of LDL by mammalian liver cells occurs mainly via receptor-mediated endocytosis, a process which entails the binding of these particles to specific receptors in specialised areas of the cell surface, the subsequent internalization of the receptor–lipoprotein complex, and ultimately the degradation and release of the ingested lipoproteins’ constituent parts. We formulate a mathematical model to study the binding and internalization (endocytosis) of LDL and VLDL particles by hepatocytes in culture. The system of ordinary differential equations, which includes a cholesterol-dependent pit production term representing feedback regulation of surface receptors in response to intracellular cholesterol levels, is analysed using numerical simulations and steady-state analysis. Our numerical results show good agreement with in vitro experimental data describing LDL uptake by cultured hepatocytes following delivery of a single bolus of lipoprotein. Our model is adapted in order to reflect the in vivo situation, in which lipoproteins are continuously delivered to the hepatocyte. In this case, our model suggests that the competition between the LDL and VLDL particles for binding to the pits on the cell surface affects the intracellular cholesterol concentration. In particular, we predict that when there is continuous delivery of low levels of lipoproteins to the cell surface, more VLDL than LDL occupies the pit, since VLDL are better competitors for receptor binding. VLDL have a cholesterol content comparable to LDL particles; however, due to the larger size of VLDL, one pit-bound VLDL particle blocks binding of several LDLs, and there is a resultant drop in the intracellular cholesterol level. When there is continuous delivery of lipoprotein at high levels to the hepatocytes, VLDL particles still out-compete LDL particles for receptor binding, and consequently more VLDL than LDL particles occupy the pit. Although the maximum intracellular cholesterol level is similar for high and low levels of lipoprotein delivery, the maximum is reached more rapidly when the lipoprotein delivery rates are high. The implications of these results for the design of in vitro experiments is discussed.   相似文献   

18.
LDL modified by incubation with platelet secretory products caused cholesterol accumulation and stimulation of cholesterol esterification in mouse peritoneal macrophages. Its uptake by the macrophages was a receptor-mediated process, not susceptible to competition by acetyl-LDL or polyanions suggesting independence of the scavenger receptor. Stimulation of the esterification process in macrophages by this modified LDL was inhibited by the lysosomal inhibitor chloroquine, indicating requirement for cellular uptake and lysosomal hydrolysis of the lipoprotein. Within the cell, the modified LDL inhibited cellular biosynthesis of triglycerides in a manner similar to the action of acetyl-LDL but different to the effect of native LDL. In the presence of HDL, acting in the medium as an acceptor for cholesterol, a low rate of cholesterol efflux from cells incubated with this modified LDL as well as with acetyl-LDL was demonstrated. A small reduction in cholesteryl ester synthesis was found in these cells, compared to a 60% reduction in cells incubated with native LDL. Thus it was demonstrated that LDL modified by platelet secretory products could induce macrophage cholesterol accumulation even though it was recognized and taken up via the regulatory LDL receptor.  相似文献   

19.
Stimulation of rat serosal mast cells in vitro triggers exocytosis of secretory granules from their cytoplasm. Thereupon, the granules lose their perigranular membranes, and about 40% of the heparin proteoglycans and all of the chondroitin sulfate proteoglycans that they initially contained are released into the incubation medium. At physiologic ionic strength and calcium ion concentration, the solubilized heparin proteoglycans, but not the chondroitin sulfate proteoglycans, form insoluble complexes with the low density lipoproteins (LDL) present. We calculated that the heparin proteoglycans could bind approximately seven times their own mass (Mr about 1 x 10(6)) of LDL cholesterol. Using gold-labeled LDL, we observed massive phagocytosis of the heparin proteoglycan-LDL complexes by cultured mouse macrophages in vitro, which was inhibited by cytochalasin B. Uptake of LDL by mouse macrophages was 45-fold higher in the presence of solubilized heparin proteoglycans than in their absence, and continued unabated over a 72-h period, indicating that the uptake process was not under negative feedback control. Excess amounts of acetyl-LDL or polyinosinic acid inhibited the uptake of these insoluble heparin proteoglycan-LDL complexes, indicating that their phagocytosis was mediated by scavenger receptors of the acetyl-LDL receptor type. The experiments reveal the following pathophysiologic mechanism relevant to atherogenesis: stimulated mast cells secrete soluble heparin proteoglycans capable of forming insoluble complexes with LDL and thereby trigger uptake of LDL by macrophages through scavenger receptor-mediated phagocytosis.  相似文献   

20.
The beta-VLDL receptor pathway of murine P388D1 macrophages   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Very low density lipoproteins Sf 100-400 (VLDL1) from hypertriglyceridemic (HTG) subjects and chylomicrons cause receptor-mediated lipid engorgement in unstimulated macrophages in vitro via the beta-VLDL receptor pathway. We now report that the murine macrophage P388D1 cell line possesses the characteristics of the beta-VLDL receptor pathway observed previously in freshly isolated resident murine peritoneal macrophages or human monocyte-macrophages. HTG-VLDL1 isolated from the plasma of subjects with hypertriglyceridemia types 3, 4, and 5 interact with P388D1 macrophages in a high-affinity, curvilinear manner. beta-VLDL, HTG-VLDL1, chylomicrons, and thrombin-treated HTG-VLDL1 (which do not bind to the LDL receptor) compete efficiently and similarly for the uptake and degradation of HTG-VLDL1. LDL and acetyl LDL do not compete, indicating that uptake of HTG-VLDL1 is via neither the LDL receptor nor the acetyl LDL receptor. Binding of thrombin-treated HTG-VLDL1 to the beta-VLDL receptor indicates that the thrombin-accessible apoE, which is absolutely required for interaction of HTG-VLDL Sf greater than 60 with the LDL receptor, is not required for binding to the beta-VLDL receptor. The uptake and degradation of 125I-labeled HTG-VLDL1 is suppressed up to 80-90% by preincubation of the cells with sterols, acetyl LDL, or beta-VLDL, indicating that this process is not via the irrepressible chylomicron remnant (apoE) receptor. Chylomicrons, HTG-VLDL1, and thrombin-treated HTG-VLDL1-but not normal VLDL1, beta-VLDL, LDL, or acetyl LDL-produce massive triglyceride accumulation (10-20-fold mass increases in 4 hr) in P388D1 macrophages.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

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