Reverse cholesterol transport (RCT) is a term used to describe the efflux of excess cellular cholesterol from peripheral tissues and its return to the liver for excretion in the bile and ultimately the feces. It is believed to be a critical mechanism by which HDL exert a protective effect on the development of atherosclerosis. In this paradigm, cholesterol is effluxed from arterial macrophages to extracellular HDLbased acceptors through the action of transporters such as ABCA1 and ABCG1. After efflux to HDL, cholesterol may be esterified in the plasma by the enzyme lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase and is ultimately transported from HDL to the liver, either directly via the scavenger receptor BI or after transfer to apolipoprotein B-containing lipoproteins by the cholesteryl ester transfer protein. Methods for assessing the integrated rate of macrophage RCT in animals have provided insights into the molecular regulation of the process and suggest that the dynamic rate of macrophage RCT is more strongly associated with atherosclerosis than the steady-state plasma concentration of HDL cholesterol. Promotion of macrophage RCT is a potential therapeutic approach to preventing or regressing atherosclerotic vascular disease, but robust measures of RCT in humans will be needed in order to confidently advance RCT-promoting therapies in clinical development.-
The contribution of ABCA1-mediated efflux of cellular phospholipid (PL) and cholesterol to human apolipoprotein A-I (apoA-I) to the formation of preb1-HDL (or lipid-poor apoA-I) is not well defined. To explore this issue, we characterized the nascent HDL particles formed when lipid-free apoA
We developed an assay that quantitates bidirectional cholesterol flux between cells and lipoproteins. Incubating Fu5AH cells with increasing concentrations of human serum resulted in increased influx and efflux; however, influx was 2-to 3-fold greater at all serum concentrations. With apolipoprotein B (apoB)-depleted serum, the ratio of influx to efflux (I/E) was close to 1, indicating cholesterol exchange. The apoB fraction of serum induced influx and little efflux, with I/E .
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