4.6 Article

Lipid-Free Apolipoprotein A-I Reduces Progression of Atherosclerosis by Mobilizing Microdomain Cholesterol and Attenuating the Number of CD131 Expressing Cells: Monitoring Cholesterol Homeostasis Using the Cellular Ester to Total Cholesterol Ratio

Journal

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1161/JAHA.116.004401

Keywords

apolipoprotein; apolipoprotein A-I; cholesterol; chronic inflammation; high-density lipoprotein; inflammation; lipid rafts; microdomains; signaling pathways

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01HL112270, R01HL127649, DK 071895, DK65598]
  2. Children's Research Institution Shared Flow Cytometry Resource at the Medical College of Wisconsin
  3. TOPS Club, Inc.

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Background-Atherosclerosis is a chronic inflammatory disorder whose development is inversely correlated with high-density lipoprotein concentration. Current therapies involve pharmaceuticals that significantly elevate plasma high-density lipoprotein cholesterol concentrations. Our studies were conducted to investigate the effects of low-dose lipid-free apolipoprotein A-I (apoA-I) on chronic inflammation. The aims of these studies were to determine how subcutaneously injected lipid-free apoA-I reduces accumulation of lipid and immune cells within the aortic root of hypercholesterolemic mice without sustained elevations in plasma high-density lipoprotein cholesterol concentrations. Methods and Results-Ldlr(-/-) and Ldlr(-/-) apoA-I-/- mice were fed a Western diet for a total of 12 weeks. After 6 weeks, a subset of mice from each group received subcutaneous injections of 200 mu g of lipid-free human apoA-I 3 times a week, while the other subset received 200 mu g of albumin, as a control. Mice treated with lipid-free apoA-I showed a decrease in cholesterol deposition and immune cell retention in the aortic root compared with albumin-treated mice, regardless of genotype. This reduction in atherosclerosis appeared to be directly related to a decrease in the number of CD131 expressing cells and the esterified cholesterol to total cholesterol content in several immune cell compartments. In addition, apoA-I treatment altered microdomain cholesterol composition that shifted CD131, the common beta subunit of the interleukin 3 receptor, from lipid raft to nonraft fractions of the plasma membrane. Conclusions-ApoA-I treatment reduced lipid and immune cell accumulation within the aortic root by systemically reducing microdomain cholesterol content in immune cells. These data suggest that lipid-free apoA-I mediates beneficial effects through attenuation of immune cell lipid raft cholesterol content, which affects numerous types of signal transduction pathways that rely on microdomain integrity for assembly and activation.

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