4.6 Article

Conversion of lipid transfer inhibitor protein (apolipoprotein F) to its active form depends on LDL composition

Journal

JOURNAL OF LIPID RESEARCH
Volume 52, Issue 12, Pages 2262-2271

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1194/jlr.M018283

Keywords

cholesteryl ester transfer protein; lipoprotein composition; lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase; lipid packing

Funding

  1. National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, the National Institutes of Health [HL60934]

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Lipid transfer inhibitor protein (LTIP) exists in both active and inactive forms. Incubation (37 degrees C) of plasma causes LTIP to transfer from a 470 kDa inactive complex to LDL where it is active. Here, we investigate the mechanisms underlying this movement. Inhibiting LCAT or cholesteryl ester transfer protein (CETP) reduced incubation-induced LTIP translocation by 40-50%. Blocking both LCAT and CETP completely prevented LTIP movement. Under appropriate conditions, either factor alone could drive maximum LTIP transfer to LDL. These data suggest that chemical modification of LDL, the 470 kDa complex, or both facilitate LTIP movement. To test this, LDL and the 470 kDa fraction were separately premodified by CETP and/or LCAT activity. Modification of the 470 kDa fraction had no effect on subsequent LTIP movement to native LDL. Pre-modification of LDL, however, induced spontaneous LTIP movement from the native 470 kDa particle to LDL. This transfer depended on the extent of LDL modification and correlated negatively with changes in the LDL phospholipid + cholesterol-to-cholesteryl ester + triglyceride ratio. We conclude that LTIP translocation is dependent on LDL lipid composition, not on its release from the inactive complex. Compositional changes that reduce the surface-to-core lipid ratio of LDL promote LTIP binding and activation.-Morton, R. E., and D. J. Greene. Conversion of lipid transfer inhibitor protein (apolipoprotein F) to its active form depends on LDL composition. J. Lipid Res. 2011. 52: 2262-2271.

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