DISCUSSION
In two separate large cohorts, we found strong cross-sectional and longitudinal inverse relationships between the relative abundance of apoC-III
2 proteoform and plasma triglyceride concentrations. Importantly, the associations were very similar in the two current cohorts and our recently reported cross-sectional study (
28- Yassine H.N.
- Trenchevska O.
- Ramrakhiani A.
- Parekh A.
- Koska J.
- Walker R.W.
- Billheimer D.
- Reaven P.D.
- Yen F.T.
- Nelson R.W.
- et al.
The association of human apolipoprotein C-III sialylation proteoforms with plasma triglycerides.
), despite differences in their demographic and clinical characteristics (e.g., age, gender, ethnicity, glucose tolerance status, and prevalence of CVD). The association between relative apoC-III
2 abundance and triglycerides remained present after adjustment for relevant demographic factors and even lipid lowering medications, suggesting that apoC-III
2 abundance may be an independent determinant of plasma triglyceride levels. Furthermore, the inverse relationship between apoC-III
2 abundance and plasma triglyceride levels remained whether apoC-III
2 was expressed as the relative abundance among all apoC-III proteoforms, the ratio to the most abundant proteoform apoC-III
1, or, in the RACED cohort, as the absolute apoC-III
2 concentrations. In both cohorts, higher apoC-III
2 relative abundance was also associated with a more favorable overall lipid profile, including lower total and LDL cholesterol and higher HDL cholesterol.
Increased prevalence of proatherogenic small dense LDL particles is commonly reported in patients with type 2 diabetes, particularly in those with poor glycemic control (
38- Garvey W.T.
- Kwon S.
- Zheng D.
- Shaughnessy S.
- Wallace P.
- Hutto A.
- Pugh K.
- Jenkins A.J.
- Klein R.L.
- Liao Y.
Effects of insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes on lipoprotein subclass particle size and concentration determined by nuclear magnetic resonance.
). apoC-III has been previously shown to facilitate production of small dense LDL (
2- Mendivil C.O.
- Zheng C.
- Furtado J.
- Lel J.
- Sacks F.M.
Metabolism of very-low-density lipoprotein and low-density lipoprotein containing apolipoprotein C-III and not other small apolipoproteins.
). The current analyses in the RACED cohort showed distinct associations between relative amounts of apoC-III proteoforms and the smallest LDL4 particles. LDL4 was positively correlated with relative abundances of apoC-III
0b and apoC-III
1, and negatively correlated with apoC-III
2 abundance. Higher relative apoC-III
2 abundance was also associated with higher (buoyant) LDL2. The association between the apoC-III
2/apoC-III
1 ratio and LDL4 persisted after adjusting for plasma triglyceride concentrations, suggesting potentially favorable effects of apoC-III
2 on LDL4 production that were separate from the effects on triglyceride levels. Interestingly, the relative abundance of apoC-III
2 was negatively associated with the most buoyant, but very low abundant, LDL1. This negative association may reflect preferential removal of the larger LDL1 particles, which are most rapidly cleared, as previously noted in studies with LDL cholesterol-lowering agents (
39- Bays H.
- Conard S.
- Leiter L.
- Bird S.
- Jensen E.
- Hanson M.
- Shah A.
- Tershakovec A.
Are post-treatment low-density lipoprotein subclass pattern analyses potentially misleading?.
). Importantly, these associations between relative apoC-III
2 abundance and LDL subclasses were generally consistent between cross-sectional and longitudinal analyses, providing further confirmation of the validity of these relationships and suggesting that they may be causally related.
Given these favorable associations between apoC-III2 abundance and the major lipid categories or LDL cholesterol subclasses, we examined the relationship between apoC-III2 and incident MACE outcomes during the VADT study. A reduced hazard ratio for apoC-III2 was most evident in the standard group, suggesting the possibility that improvement in other risk factors or the specific effects of diabetes medications in the intensive treatment group might have masked the association between the apoC-III2 relative abundance and MACEs. Although the number of MACEs was relatively small in this subcohort, we were able to find the expected increase in MACEs with higher values of standard risk factors represented by the UKPDS risk coefficient. Importantly, the association between the relative abundance of apoC-III2 and MACEs in the standard group was independent of the UKPDS risk coefficient, but not of fasting triglyceride concentrations, indicating that this effect was largely mediated by changes in triglyceride metabolism.
Several previous studies showed association between apoC-III concentrations on lipid particles and coronary artery disease (
14- Hodis H.N.
- Mack W.J.
- Azen S.P.
- Alaupovic P.
- Pogoda J.M.
- LaBree L.
- Hemphill L.C.
- Kramsch D.M.
- Blankenhorn D.H.
Triglyceride- and cholesterol-rich lipoproteins have a differential effect on mild/moderate and severe lesion progression as assessed by quantitative coronary angiography in a controlled trial of lovastatin.
,
15- Sacks F.M.
- Alaupovic P.
- Moye L.A.
- Cole T.G.
- Sussex B.
- Stampfer M.J.
- Pfeffer M.A.
- Braunwald E.
VLDL, apolipoproteins B, CIII, and E, and risk of recurrent coronary events in the Cholesterol and Recurrent Events (CARE) trial.
,
16- Lee S-J.
- Campos H.
- Moye L.A.
- Sacks F.M.
LDL containing apolipoprotein CIII is an independent risk factor for coronary events in diabetic patients.
,
17- Mendivil C.O.
- Rimm E.B.
- Furtado J.
- Chiuve S.E.
- Sacks F.M.
Low-density lipoproteins containing apolipoprotein C-III and the risk of coronary heart disease.
). In the present study, we did not find a significant association between total apoC-III concentration in plasma and MACEs. There are several potential explanations of our results. First, total apoC-III in plasma may be a less sensitive biomarker of cardiovascular risk compared with apoC-III on specific lipid particles. In fact, no studies, to date, have shown a relationship between total plasma apoC-III concentrations and incident cardiovascular events. Second, our VADT subset cohort was modest in size, participants were relatively homogenous in their high cardiovascular risk, and were on multiple medications that could alter either cardiovascular risk and/or total apoC-III concentrations. Third, our data suggest that apoC-III proteoforms vary in their association with, and potential contribution to, plasma lipids and cardiovascular risk. Thus, a measure of total apoC-III in plasma may not reflect the overall risk of all the individual proteoforms.
This is the first analysis of the relationships between apoC-III proteoforms and plasma lipids, LDL-cholesterol subclasses, and cardiovascular outcomes in larger cohorts. This type of analysis has previously been limited by the time- and labor-intensive nature of the isoelectric focusing methodology that was used in previous studies. In two earlier small cross-sectional studies, the concentrations of sialylated apoC-III proteoforms in triglyceride-rich lipoproteins and their production rates correlated more strongly with plasma triglycerides than apoC-III
0 (
22- Kashyap M.L.
- Srivastava L.S.
- Hynd B.A.
- Gartside P.S.
- Perisutti G.
Quantitation of human apolipoprotein C-III and its subspecie by radioimmunoassay and analytical isoelectric focusing: abnormal plasma triglyceride-rich lipoprotein apolipoprotein C-III subspecie concentrations in hypertriglyceridemia.
,
26- Mauger J-F.
- Couture P.
- Bergeron N.
- Lamarche B.
Apolipoprotein C-III isoforms: kinetics and relative implication in lipid metabolism.
). The production rate of apoC-III
2 also negatively correlated with LDL peak particle size (
26- Mauger J-F.
- Couture P.
- Bergeron N.
- Lamarche B.
Apolipoprotein C-III isoforms: kinetics and relative implication in lipid metabolism.
). However, in both studies, the regression slopes between apoC-III proteoforms and plasma triglycerides were greater for apoC-III
1 than for apoC-III
2, indicating a less harmful relationship between apoC-III
2 and triglycerides. The reasons for differences between results of these smaller studies and our findings are unclear, but may be explained by differences in study participants and methodologies. Participants in our cohorts demonstrated moderate or advanced levels of glucose intolerance, and had a high prevalence of hypertension and use of glucose-lowering agents. In addition, isoelectric focusing does not distinguish among the many nonsialylated proteoforms. For example, two major nonsialylated proteoforms showed distinct associations with several demographic and metabolic outcomes in our study.
apoC-III inhibits both lipolysis in vitro and cellular uptake of triglyceride-rich lipoproteins (
3Inhibition of lipoprotein lipase by an apoprotein of human very low density lipoprotein.
,
4Inhibitory effects of C apolipoproteins from rats and humans on the uptake of triglyceride-rich lipoproteins and their remnants by the perfused rat liver.
). Prior in vitro studies indicated that apoC-III sialylation may have a substantial functional effect on both VLDL uptake and LPL-mediated lipolysis (
25- Mann C.J.
- Troussard A.A.
- Yen F.T.
- Hannouche N.
- Najib J.
- Fruchart J-C.
- Lotteau V.
- André P.
- Bihain B.E.
Inhibitory effects of specific apolipoprotein C-III isoforms on the binding of triglyceride-rich lipoproteins to the lipolysis-stimulated receptor.
,
40- Holleboom A.G.
- Karlsson H.
- Lin R.S.
- Beres T.M.
- Sierts J.A.
- Herman D.S.
- Stroes E.S.
- Aerts J.M.
- Kastelein J.J.
- Motazacker M.M.
- et al.
Heterozygosity for a loss-of-function mutation in GALNT2 improves plasma triglyceride clearance in man.
). Of particular relevance to our study, Mann et al. (
25- Mann C.J.
- Troussard A.A.
- Yen F.T.
- Hannouche N.
- Najib J.
- Fruchart J-C.
- Lotteau V.
- André P.
- Bihain B.E.
Inhibitory effects of specific apolipoprotein C-III isoforms on the binding of triglyceride-rich lipoproteins to the lipolysis-stimulated receptor.
) reported that, compared with apoC-III
1 or apoC-III
0, apoC-III
2 is a less effective inhibitor of VLDL uptake by the hepatic LSR. The LSR has been proposed as a rate-limiting factor for the clearance of triglycerides during the postprandial period (
41- Mann C.J.
- Khallou J.
- Chevreuil O.
- Troussard A.A.
- Guermani L.M.
- Launay K.
- Delplanque B.
- Yen F.T.
- Bihain B.E.
Mechanism of activation and functional significance of the lipolysis-stimulated receptor. Evidence for a role as chylomicron remnant receptor.
,
42- Yen F.T.
- Mann C.J.
- Guermani L.M.
- Hannouche N.F.
- Hubert N.
- Hornick C.A.
- Bordeau V.N.
- Agnani G.
- Bihain B.E.
Identification of a lipolysis-stimulated receptor that is distinct from the LDL receptor and the LDL receptor-related protein.
). LSR heterozygous mice display increased postprandial triglyceride levels, decreased clearance of lipid particles, and increased levels of proatherogenic lipoproteins following a Western diet (
35- Yen F.T.
- Roitel O.
- Bonnard L.
- Notet V.
- Pratte D.
- Stenger C.
- Magueur E.
- Bihain B.E.
Lipolysis stimulated lipoprotein receptor: a novel molecular link between hyperlipidemia, weight gain, and atherosclerosis in mice.
). Silencing of hepatic LSR in mice has also been shown to lead to hypertriglyceridemia (
43- Narvekar P.
- Berriel Diaz M.
- Krones-Herzig A.
- Hardeland U.
- Strzoda D.
- Stohr S.
- Frohme M.
- Herzig S.
Liver-specific loss of lipolysis-stimulated lipoprotein receptor triggers systemic hyperlipidemia in mice.
). We observed an increase in DiI-VLDL uptake in HepG2 cells in the presence of oleic acid that was inhibited by apoC-III. This inhibition was less pronounced with apoC-III isolated from subjects with high plasma apoC-III
2/apoC-III
1, as compared with that observed with the same amount of apoC-III isolated from subjects with low apoC-III
2/apoC-III
1. This is consistent with the previously demonstrated effect of apoC-III proteoforms on uptake of triglyceride-rich lipoproteins (
25- Mann C.J.
- Troussard A.A.
- Yen F.T.
- Hannouche N.
- Najib J.
- Fruchart J-C.
- Lotteau V.
- André P.
- Bihain B.E.
Inhibitory effects of specific apolipoprotein C-III isoforms on the binding of triglyceride-rich lipoproteins to the lipolysis-stimulated receptor.
). As the conditions of the VLDL uptake experiments favored the LSR pathway, i.e., including pretreatment with leptin, shorter duration of cells starvation time, and coincubation with oleic acids, these experiments did not permit exploration of other important mechanisms contributing to clearance of triglyceride-rich lipoproteins. These additional pathways include the LDL-receptor (
44- Brown M.S.
- Goldstein J.L.
A receptor-mediated pathway for cholesterol homeostasis.
), LDL receptor-related protein 1 (
45- Rohlmann A.
- Gotthardt M.
- Hammer R.E.
- Herz J.
Inducible inactivation of hepatic LRP gene by cre-mediated recombination confirms role of LRP in clearance of chylomicron remnants.
), and heparan sulfate proteoglycans (
46- Ji Z.S.
- Brecht W.J.
- Miranda R.D.
- Hussain M.M.
- Innerarity T.L.
- Mahley R.W.
Role of heparan sulfate proteoglycans in the binding and uptake of apolipoprotein E-enriched remnant lipoproteins by cultured cells.
,
47- MacArthur J.M.
- Bishop J.R.
- Stanford K.I.
- Wang L.
- Bensadoun A.
- Witztum J.L.
- Esko J.D.
Liver heparan sulfate proteoglycans mediate clearance of triglyceride-rich lipoproteins independently of LDL receptor family members.
).
Our ex vivo data also showed less efficient inhibition of LPL-mediated lipolysis for apoC-III with higher apoC-III
2/apoC-III
1 ratio. This may be in contrast with older studies showing either no effect (
48- Stoline A.M.
- Saku K.
- Hynd B.A.
- Kashyap M.L.
Effect of desialylation of very low-density lipoproteins on their catabolism by lipoprotein lipase.
,
49Activation of lipoprotein lipase by apolipoprotein C-II is modulated by the COOH terminal region of apolipoprotein C-III.
) or greater inhibition of LPL activity (
40- Holleboom A.G.
- Karlsson H.
- Lin R.S.
- Beres T.M.
- Sierts J.A.
- Herman D.S.
- Stroes E.S.
- Aerts J.M.
- Kastelein J.J.
- Motazacker M.M.
- et al.
Heterozygosity for a loss-of-function mutation in GALNT2 improves plasma triglyceride clearance in man.
,
50- Holdsworth G.
- Stocks J.
- Dodson P.
- Galton D.J.
An abnormal triglyceride-rich lipoprotein containing excess sialylated apolipoprotein C-III.
) with increased apoC-III sialylation. The discrepancy may be due to methodological differences in the isolation of apoC-III isoforms, the effect of neuraminidase used for desialylation in some studies, the distinct action of the two sialylated proteoforms rather than sialylation in general, differences in the amount of apoC-III used in the experiments, and differences in the clinical characteristics of apoC-III donors. The effective amount of apoC-III to inhibit LPL-mediated lipolysis in our study and in some previous studies (
37- Wang C.S.
- McConathy W.J.
- Kloer H.U.
- Alaupovic P.
Modulation of lipoprotein lipase activity by apolipoproteins. Effect of apolipoprotein C-III.
,
40- Holleboom A.G.
- Karlsson H.
- Lin R.S.
- Beres T.M.
- Sierts J.A.
- Herman D.S.
- Stroes E.S.
- Aerts J.M.
- Kastelein J.J.
- Motazacker M.M.
- et al.
Heterozygosity for a loss-of-function mutation in GALNT2 improves plasma triglyceride clearance in man.
) was also substantially higher than apoC-III concentrations inhibiting VLDL uptake. Thus, it is possible that inhibition of lipolysis by apoC-III may contribute to increased triglyceride levels only in those individuals with very high apoC-III levels.
apoC-III glycosylation may affect metabolism of triglyceride-rich lipoproteins by several mechanisms. Glycosylation alters multiple apolipoprotein properties, including conformational stability, resistance to proteolysis, charge, water-binding, and biological recognition in protein targeting and cell to cell interactions (
51Glycoproteins: what are the sugar chains for?.
). Greater sialylation may stabilize apoC-III complexes with other apolipoproteins, including apoA-II, apoB, apoC-I, apoC-II, and apoE, and thus potentially enhance their effects on lipid metabolism, including clearance of triglyceride-rich particles (
33- Zheng C.
- Khoo C.
- Ikewaki K.
- Sacks F.M.
Rapid turnover of apolipoprotein C-III-containing triglyceride-rich lipoproteins contributing to the formation of LDL subfractions.
,
52- Davidson W.S.
- Silva R.A.
- Chantepie S.
- Lagor W.R.
- Chapman M.J.
- Kontush A.
Proteomic analysis of defined HDL subpopulations reveals particle-specific protein clusters: relevance to antioxidative function.
,
53- Campos H.
- Perlov D.
- Khoo C.
- Sacks F.M.
Distinct patterns of lipoproteins with apoB defined by presence of apoE or apoC-III in hypercholesterolemia and hypertriglyceridemia.
,
54- Morita S.Y.
- Sakurai A.
- Nakano M.
- Kitagawa S.
- Handa T.
Presence of apolipoprotein C-III attenuates apolipoprotein E-mediated cellular uptake of cholesterol-containing lipid particles by HepG2 cells.
). The higher native apoC-II abundance noted in association with precipitated apoC-III from individuals with higher apoC-III
2/apoC-III
1 ratios may represent one example of such a scenario. It is possible that greater activation of LPL-mediated lipolysis by increased amounts of apoC-II could help counter the inhibitory effect of apoC-III on these events.
There were several other notable findings related to glucose- and lipid-lowering therapy in this study. First, relative apoC-III
2 abundance was increased after pioglitazone treatment in the ACT NOW patients. Relative apoC-III
2 abundance also increased in the RACED cohort in both treatment groups, and they both received rosiglitazone. This suggests the possibility of a PPAR-γ agonist class effect on apoC-III
2, which could be related to their known triglyceride lowering action. The positive cross-sectional association of apoC-III
2/apoC-III
1 with insulin sensitivity in our previous study (
28- Yassine H.N.
- Trenchevska O.
- Ramrakhiani A.
- Parekh A.
- Koska J.
- Walker R.W.
- Billheimer D.
- Reaven P.D.
- Yen F.T.
- Nelson R.W.
- et al.
The association of human apolipoprotein C-III sialylation proteoforms with plasma triglycerides.
) indicates that this effect may be related to the insulin-sensitizing action of PPAR-γ agonists. Second, the relative distribution of apoC-III proteoforms was modified by the use of lipid-lowering drugs, and there was evidence of proteoform-specific effects. Whereas the use of both fibrates and statins was associated with lower native apoC-III, the increase in apoC-III
2 was more evident with fibrates. Relative apoC-III proteoform abundance also significantly differed between the races or ethnicities. In the ACT NOW cohort, higher relative apoC-III
2 in African Americans appeared to account for more than 20‥ of the differences in plasma triglyceride concentrations between African Americans and both non-Hispanic whites and Hispanics, suggesting a possible contribution of this proteoform to the well-described lower triglyceride concentrations in African Americans (
55- Sumner A.E.
- Finley K.B.
- Genovese D.J.
- Criqui M.H.
- Boston R.C.
Fasting triglyceride and the triglyceride-HDL cholesterol ratio are not markers of insulin resistance in African Americans.
). Aggressive use of lipid-lowering therapy per protocol in the entire cohort and a smaller number of African Americans may explain why we did not observe significant racial differences in the relative apoC-III
2 abundance in the RACED cohort. These observations need to be validated in larger populations where lipid-lowering medication use is relatively low.
Several limitations of the study deserve mention. The study was a post hoc analysis of baseline and follow-up samples from two previously completed studies. Although the studies were well powered to examine associations between apoC-III and both baseline and longitudinal lipid values, the analysis relating apoC-III proteoforms and incident MACEs was not, and must be considered exploratory. We also did not measure apoC-III proteoforms in different lipoprotein fractions, which may permit further insight into their role in lipid metabolism. Samples for these analyses were stored for several years at −80°C before MSIA was performed. Previous investigation of the effects of storage, time, and freeze/thaw cycles on these assays has indicated that the measurements are relatively stable (
27- Trenchevska O.
- Schaab M.R.
- Nelson R.W.
- Nedelkov D.
Development of multiplex mass spectrometric immunoassay for detection and quantification of apolipoproteins C-I, C-II, C-III and their proteoforms.
). Moreover, despite differences in the storage time of the samples in the two different cohorts, there was a striking consistency in the relationships between apoC-III proteoforms and plasma lipids. Because the apoC-III complexes in our ex vivo studies contained other apolipoproteins, we could not distinguish to what extent the observed effects resulted from modification of apoC-III action per se or effects on the amount and activity of other apolipoproteins. Thus, further studies are needed to identify the effects of individual apoC-III proteoforms. While the RACED cohort showed a weak but significant negative association between absolute apoC-III
2 concentrations and plasma triglycerides, our previous study in obese adolescents showed no association between these two variables. The discrepancy may be explained by differences among the cohorts, with the RACED cohort larger in size, comprised of diabetes patients, and having a broader range of triglyceride concentrations. Importantly, the associations of plasma triglycerides with total apoC-III or absolute concentrations of other major apoC-III proteoforms were positive in both the RACED cohort and the previous study, further supporting a different relationship of apoC-III
2 with plasma triglycerides.
In conclusion, the present analyses provide the first evidence, from two independent large cohorts, of a strong and inverse association between the relative amounts of a disialylated apoC-III proteoforms and proatherogenic plasma lipid profiles in individuals with abnormal glucose metabolism. These relationships are distinct from those of total apoC-III and other major apoC-III proteoforms, and, together with our ex vivo data, support the concept that apoC-III proteoforms may have different effects on lipid metabolism. Measuring relative amounts of apoC-III variants may add to the risk assessment that can be obtained through measurement of total plasma apoC-III. Importantly, gender, race, and several classes of medications appear to influence the relative amounts of the potentially more favorable apoC-III2 proteoform, and this may help account for some of their effects on triglyceride and other lipid levels. These novel results also emphasize the need for further study of posttranslational modifications of apolipoproteins to clarify their role in lipid metabolism and cardiometabolic risk.
Article info
Publication history
Published online: March 03, 2016
Received in revised form:
March 2,
2016
Received:
October 28,
2015
Footnotes
This work was supported by the National Institutes of Health Grants R24-DK090958 (R.W.N./P.D.R.), R01-067690 (P.D.R.), R01-HL94775 (P.D.R.), R01-DK082542 (R.W.N.), and K23-HL107389 and 15BGIA25690024 from the American Heart Association (H.Y.), the Cooperative Studies Program of the Department of Veterans Affairs Office of Research and Development (#431), and Takeda Pharmaceuticals. The contents of this article do not represent the views of the Department of Veterans Affairs or the United States Government. The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institutes of Health.
Abbreviations:
CIconfidence interval
ddes-Alanine
DAPI4′,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole
Fucfucose
Galgalactose
Gal-NAcN-acetygalactosamine
HbA1chemoglobin A1c
Hihigh apoC-III2/apoC-III1 ratio
HRhazard ratio
Intintensive glucose-lowering therapy
Lolow apoC-III2/apoC-III1 ratio
LPLlipoprotein lipase
LSRlipolysis-stimulated receptor
MACEmajor adverse cardiovascular event
MSIAmass spectrometric immunoassay
PBSTphosphate buffered saline with Tween-20
Piopioglitazone
Plcplacebo
RPArelative peak area Std, standard glucose-lowering therapy
UKPDSUnited Kingdom Prospective Diabetes Study
Copyright
© 2016 ASBMB. Currently published by Elsevier Inc; originally published by American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology.