Serum amyloid A promotes ABCA1-dependent and ABCA1-independent lipid efflux from cells |
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Authors: | Stonik John A Remaley Alan T Demosky Steve J Neufeld Edward B Bocharov Alexander Brewer H Bryan |
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Affiliation: | National Institutes of Health Molecular Disease Branch, National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, Bethesda, MD, USA. |
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Abstract: | Serum amyloid A (SAA) is an acute phase protein that associates with HDL. In order to examine the role of SAA in reverse-cholesterol transport, lipid efflux was tested to SAA from HeLa cells before and after transfection with the ABCA1 transporter. ABCA1 expression increased efflux of cholesterol and phospholipid to SAA by 3-fold and 2-fold, respectively. In contrast to apoA-I, SAA also removed lipid without ABCA1; cholesterol efflux from control cells to SAA was 10-fold higher than for apoA-I. Furthermore, SAA effluxed cholesterol from Tangier disease fibroblasts and from cells after inhibition of ABCA1 by fixation with paraformaldehyde. In summary, SAA can act as a lipid acceptor for ABCA1, but unlike apoA-I, it can also efflux lipid without ABCA1, by most likely a detergent-like extraction process. These results suggest that SAA may play a unique role as an auxiliary lipid acceptor in the removal of lipid from sites of inflammation. |
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Keywords: | Serum amyloid A Apolipoprotein A-I ABCA1 transporter Cholesterol Atherosclerosis |
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