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Journal of Lipid Research, Vol 37, 168-178, Copyright © 1996 by Lipid Research, Inc.
CY Lin and DW Morel
Oxysterols, oxidized derivatives of cholesterol, may enter the circulation
as contaminants of cholesterol-containing food, arise through peroxidation
of lipoproteins, or be generated by enzymatic reactions. They are found in
serum associated either with lipoproteins or with albumin. In these
studies, 25-hydroxycholesterol (25OHC) was used as a model oxysterol to
investigate the effect of esterification on the association of oxysterols
with serum components and their delivery to cultured cells. 25OHC added in
vitro to fresh human serum was readily esterified during incubation at 37
degrees C, most likely by serum lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase (LCAT)
as it was blocked by known inhibitors of LCAT. The 25OHC-esters formed were
identified as monoesters by comparing their elution on high performance
liquid chromatography and thin-layer chromatography with that of chemically
synthesized 25OHC mono- and diesters. Esterification doubled the percentage
of 25OHC associated with lipoproteins, concomitantly decreasing the amount
associated with albumin. Whereas unesterified 25OHC readily transferred
between isolated lipoproteins, 25OHC-esters remained associated with donor
lipoproteins unless human lipoprotein- deficient serum was added. That
cholesteryl ester transfer protein (CETP) mediated transfer of 25OHC-esters
was demonstrated by the ineffectiveness of rat lipoprotein-deficient serum
as well as by the ability of IC-4, an anti-CETP monoclonal antibody, to
suppress the transfer. Esterification of 25OHC in serum limited its entry
into human erythrocytes and fibroblasts (GM 3468A cells) in vitro.
Up-regulation of fibroblast low density lipoprotein (LDL)-receptors
enhanced the uptake of esterified 25OHC from medium, but did little to
enhance the total uptake of 25OHC. Thus, esterification of oxysterols in
serum shifts their distribution away from albumin into LDL and high density
lipoprotein (HDL) and limits their availability to cells in culture.
ARTICLES
Esterification of oxysterols in human serum: effects on distribution and cellular uptake
Department of Biochemistry, Medical College of Pennsylvania and Hahnemann University, Philadelphia 19129, USA.
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