4.7 Article

Nitro-oleic acid, a ligand of CD36, reduces cholesterol accumulation by modulating oxidized-LDL uptake and cholesterol efflux in RAW264.7 macrophages

Journal

REDOX BIOLOGY
Volume 36, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.redox.2020.101591

Keywords

Nitro-fatty acid; Atherosclerosis; CD36; Macrophages; Foam cell; Nitro-oleic acid

Funding

  1. Fondo para la Investigacion Cientifica y Tecnologica (FONCYT) del Ministerio de Ciencia, Tecnologia e Innovacion Argentina [PICT 3063-2013]
  2. Secretaria de Ciencia y Tecnica (SECyT) de la Universidad Nacional de Cordoba. Argentina
  3. National Institutes of Health, United State [R01-HL64937, R01-HL132550, P01-HL103455, R01-GM125944, R01-DK112854]
  4. American Heart Association, United State [17GRN33660955]

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Macrophages play a pivotal role in the early stages of atherosclerosis development; they excessively accumulate cholesterol in the cytosol in response to modified Low Density Lipoprotein (mLDL). The mLDL are incorporated through scavenger receptors. CD36 is a high-affinity cell surface scavenger receptor that facilitates the binding and uptake of long-chain fatty acids and mLDL into the cell. Numerous structurally diverse ligands can initiate signaling responses through CD36 to regulate cell metabolism, migration, and angiogenesis. Nitro-fatty acids are endogenous electrophilic lipid mediators that react with and modulate the function of multiple enzymes and transcriptional regulatory proteins. These actions induce the expression of several anti-inflammatory and cytoprotective genes and limit pathologic responses in experimental models of atherosclerosis, cardiac ischemia/reperfusion, and inflammatory diseases. Pharmacological and genetic approaches were used to explore the actions of nitro-oleic acid (NO2-OA) on macrophage lipid metabolism. Pure synthetic NO2-OA dose-dependently increased CD36 expression in RAW264.7 macrophages and this up-regulation was abrogated in BMDM from Nrf2-KO mice. Ligand binding analysis revealed that NO2-OA specifically interacts with CD36, thus limiting the binding and uptake of mLDL. Docking analysis shows that NO2-OA establishes a low binding energy interaction with the alpha helix containing Lys164 in CD36. NO2-OA also restored autophagy flux in mLDL-loaded macrophages, thus reversing cholesterol deposition within the cell. In aggregate, these results indicate that NO2-OA reduces cholesterol uptake by binding to CD36 and increases cholesterol efflux by restoring autophagy.

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