The mechanism of formation of functional high-density lipoprotein (HDL) from secreted lipid-free apolipoprotein A1 (apo A1) was determined using human liver-derived (HepG2) cells, human intestine-derived (CaCO2) cells, and CHO cells stably expressing full-length human apo A1 (CHO-A1 cells). In each cell line, a significant proportion of secreted apo A1 had a Stokes radius of 2.6 nm and was inactive in binding phospholipids (PL) or free cholesterol (FC). Extracellularly, in a reaction dependent on membrane transporter ABCA1, prealpha-migrating 2.6 nm apo A1 was converted to a prebeta-migrating product that was able to bind PL. Both forms were reactive with mAb55201, a monoclonal antibody specific for native plasma lipid-poor (prebeta1) HDL [Nakamura, Y., et al. (2004) Biochemistry 43, 14311-14318]. The physical properties of precursor and product apo A1 suggested that both are monomers, with Stokes radii of 2.6 and 3.6 nm, respectively, consistent with the absence of intermolecular cross-linking of apo A1 in lipid-poor HDL, reported previously. Product but not precursor apo A1 promoted reverse cholesterol transport (RCT) from human aortic smooth muscle cells. These studies suggest an important contribution of secreted lipid-free apo A1 to HDL formation.
In human vascular smooth muscle cells, inhibitors of protein kinase C activity reduced serine phosphorylation of caveolin-1 and increased sterol binding by this protein. This was measured after immunoprecipitation of caveolin-1 from cells labeled with tritiated cholesterol or the photoactivable cholesterol analogue FCBP [Fielding et al. (2002) Biochemistry 41, 4929-4937]. At the same time cellular sterol efflux was inhibited. Mutagenesis within a caveolin-1 central domain (residues 80-104) suggested a major role for serine-80 in mediating both of these effects. To perturb sterol binding, platelet-derived growth factor was added to the cells, leading to a transient loss of caveolin-1-associated sterol. Under these conditions, sterol efflux was stimulated, and caveolin-1 phosphorylation at tyrosine(14), assayed with a selective antibody, was substantially increased above baseline levels. These changes were also blocked by inhibitors of protein kinase C activity. Selective inhibitors of the platelet-derived growth factor receptor and downstream kinases were used to show that loss of sterol from caveolin-1 preceded tyrosine phosphorylation, but relipidation was dependent on phosphotyrosine hydrolysis.
Apolipoprotein A1 (apo A1), the major protein of high-density lipoprotein, is secreted as a proprotein and then cleaved by an uncharacterized metalloproteinase. Here this enzyme is identified as C-terminal procollagen endoproteinase/bone morphogenetic protein-1 (BMP-1). Studies with recombinant BMP-1, BMP-1 antibody, and BMP-1 siRNA establish this proteinase as the major or only apo A1-converting activity secreted by human liver-derived (HepG2) cells and CHO cells stably expressing human apo A1. BMP-1 stimulates the conversion of newly secreted proapo A1 to its phospholipid- (PL-) binding form. In this way it promotes formation of functional HDL and reverse cholesterol transport, while inhibiting filtration and clearance of uncleaved proprotein. Alpha2-macroglobulin, a protease inhibitor secreted as part of the innate immune response, inhibits BMP-1 activity and blocks the maturation of proapo A1. The decrease in circulating apo A1 levels that is characteristic of the response to inflammation and infection may be mediated, at least in part, via BMP-1 by this novel mechanism.
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