6 resultados para HDL-CHOLESTEROL

em National Center for Biotechnology Information - NCBI


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Scavenger receptor BI (SR-BI) is a cell surface receptor that binds high density lipoproteins (HDL) and mediates selective uptake of HDL cholesteryl esters (CE) in transfected cells. To address the physiological role of SR-BI in HDL cholesterol homeostasis, mice were generated bearing an SR-BI promoter mutation that resulted in decreased expression of the receptor in homozygous mutant (designated SR-BI att) mice. Hepatic expression of the receptor was reduced by 53% with a corresponding increase in total plasma cholesterol levels of 50–70% in SR-BI att mice, attributable almost exclusively to elevated plasma HDL. In addition to increased HDL-CE, HDL phospholipids and apo A-1 levels were elevated, and there was an increase in HDL particle size in mutant mice. Metabolic studies using HDL bearing nondegradable radiolabels in both the protein and lipid components demonstrated that reducing hepatic SR-BI expression by half was associated with a decrease of 47% in selective uptake of CE by the liver, and a corresponding reduction of 53% in selective removal of HDL-CE from plasma. Taken together, these findings strongly support a pivotal role for hepatic SR-BI expression in regulating plasma HDL levels and indicate that SR-BI is the major molecule mediating selective CE uptake by the liver. The inverse correlation between plasma HDL levels and atherosclerosis further suggests that SR-BI may influence the development of coronary artery disease.

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Apolipoprotein (apo) A-II is the second most abundant apolipoprotein in high density lipoprotein (HDL). To study its role in lipoprotein metabolism and atherosclerosis susceptibility, apo A-II knockout mice were created. Homozygous knockout mice had 67% and 52% reductions in HDL cholesterol levels in the fasted and fed states, respectively, and HDL particle size was reduced. Metabolic turnover studies revealed the HDL decrease to be due to both decreased HDL cholesterol ester and apo A-I transport rate and increased HDL cholesterol ester and apo A-I fractional catabolic rate. The apo A-II deficiency trait was bred onto the atherosclerosis-prone apo E-deficient background, which resulted in a surprising 66% decrease in cholesterol levels due primarily to decreased atherogenic lipoprotein remnant particles. Metabolic turnover studies indicated increased remnant clearance in the absence of apo A-II. Finally, apo A-II deficiency was associated with lower free fatty acid, glucose, and insulin levels, suggesting an insulin hypersensitivity state. In summary, apo A-II plays a complex role in lipoprotein metabolism, with some antiatherogenic properties such as the maintenance of a stable HDL pool, and other proatherogenic properties such as decreasing clearance of atherogenic lipoprotein remnants and promotion of insulin resistance.

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The class B, type I scavenger receptor, SR-BI, binds high density lipoprotein (HDL) and mediates the selective uptake of HDL cholesteryl ester (CE) by cultured transfected cells. The high levels of SR-BI expression in steroidogenic cells in vivo and its regulation by tropic hormones provides support for the hypothesis that SR-BI is a physiologically relevant HDL receptor that supplies substrate cholesterol for steroid hormone synthesis. This hypothesis was tested by determining the ability of antibody directed against murine (m) SR-BI to inhibit the selective uptake of HDL CE in Y1-BS1 adrenocortical cells. Anti-mSR-BI IgG inhibited HDL CE-selective uptake by 70% and cell association of HDL particles by 50% in a dose-dependent manner. The secretion of [3H]steroids derived from HDL containing [3H]CE was inhibited by 78% by anti-mSR-BI IgG. These results establish mSR-BI as the major route for the selective uptake of HDL CE and the delivery of HDL cholesterol to the steroidogenic pathway in cultured mouse adrenal cells.

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Lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase (LCAT) is a key plasma enzyme in cholesterol and high density lipoprotein (HDL) metabolism. Transgenic rabbits overexpressing human LCAT had 15-fold greater plasma LCAT activity that nontransgenic control rabbits. This degree of overexpression was associated with a 6.7-fold increase in the plasma HDL cholesterol concentration in LCAT transgenic rabbits. On a 0.3% cholesterol diet, the HDL cholesterol concentrations increased from 24 +/- 1 to 39 +/- 3 mg/dl in nontransgenic control rabbits (n = 10; P < 0.05) and increased from 161 +/- 5 to 200 +/- 21 mg/dl (P < 0.001) in the LCAT transgenic rabbits (n = 9). Although the baseline non-HDL concentrations of control (4 +/- 3 mg/dl) and transgenic rabbits (18 +/- 4 mg/dl) were similar, the cholesterol-rich diet raised the non-HDL cholesterol concentrations, reflecting the atherogenic very low density, intermediate density, and low density lipoprotein particles observed by gel filtration chromatography. The non-HDL cholesterol rose to 509 +/- 57 mg/dl in controls compared with only 196 +/- 14 mg/dl in the LCAT transgenic rabbits (P < 0.005). The differences in the plasma lipoprotein response to a cholesterol-rich diet observed in the transgenic rabbits paralleled the susceptibility to developing aortic atherosclerosis. Compared with nontransgenic controls, LCAT transgenic rabbits were protected from diet-induced atherosclerosis with significant reductions determined by both quantitative planimetry (-86%; P < 0.003) and quantitative immunohistochemistry (-93%; P < 0.009). Our results establish the importance of LCAT in the metabolism of both HDL and apolipoprotein B-containing lipoprotein particles with cholesterol feeding and the response to diet-induced atherosclerosis. In addition, these findings identify LCAT as a new target for therapy to prevent atherosclerosis.

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Plasma high density lipoprotein (HDL), which protects against atherosclerosis, is thought to remove cholesterol from peripheral tissues and to deliver cholesteryl esters via a selective uptake pathway to the liver (reverse cholesterol transport) and steroidogenic tissues (e.g., adrenal gland for storage and hormone synthesis). Despite its physiologic and pathophysiologic importance, the cellular metabolism of HDL has not been well defined. The class B, type I scavenger receptor (SR-BI) has been proposed to play an important role in HDL metabolism because (i) it is a cell surface HDL receptor which mediates selective cholesterol uptake in cultured cells, (ii) its physiologically regulated expression is most abundant in the liver and steroidogenic tissues, and (iii) hepatic overexpression dramatically lowers plasma HDL. To test directly the normal role of SR-BI in HDL metabolism, we generated mice with a targeted null mutation in the SR-BI gene. In heterozygous and homozygous mutants relative to wild-type controls, plasma cholesterol concentrations were increased by ≈31% and 125%, respectively, because of the formation of large, apolipoprotein A-I (apoA-I)-containing particles, and adrenal gland cholesterol content decreased by 42% and 72%, respectively. The plasma concentration of apoA-I, the major protein in HDL, was unchanged in the mutants. This, in conjunction with the increased lipoprotein size, suggests that the increased plasma cholesterol in the mutants was due to decreased selective cholesterol uptake. These results provide strong support for the proposal that in mice the gene encoding SR-BI plays a key role in determining the levels of plasma lipoprotein cholesterol (primarily HDL) and the accumulation of cholesterol stores in the adrenal gland. If it has a similar role in controlling plasma HDL in humans, SR-BI may influence the development and progression of atherosclerosis and may be an attractive candidate for therapeutic intervention in this disease.

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High density lipoproteins (HDLs) play a role in two processes that include the amelioration of atheroma formation and the centripetal flow of cholesterol from the extrahepatic organs to the liver. This study tests the hypothesis that the flow of sterol from the peripheral organs to the liver is dependent upon circulating HDL concentrations. Transgenic C57BL/6 mice were used that expressed variable amounts of simian cholesteryl ester-transfer protein (CETP). The rate of centripetal cholesterol flux was quantitated as the sum of the rates of cholesterol synthesis and low density lipoprotein-cholesterol uptake in the extrahepatic tissues. Steady-state concentrations of cholesterol carried in HDL (HDL-C) varied from 59 to 15 mg/dl and those of apolipoprotein AI from 138 to 65 mg/dl between the control mice (CETPc) and those maximally expressing the transfer protein (CETP+). There was no difference in the size of the extrahepatic cholesterol pools in the CETPc and CETP+ animals. Similarly, the rates of cholesterol synthesis (83 and 80 mg/day per kg, respectively) and cholesterol carried in low density lipoprotein uptake (4 and 3 mg/day per kg, respectively) were virtually identical in the two groups. Thus, under circumstances where the steady-state concentration of HDL-C varied 4-fold, the centripetal flux of cholesterol from the peripheral organs to the liver was essentially constant at approximately 87 mg/day per kg. These studies demonstrate that neither the concentration of HDL-C or apolipoprotein AI nor the level of CETP activity dictates the magnitude of centripetal cholesterol flux from the extrahepatic organs to the liver, at least in the mouse.