4.6 Article

A thumbwheel mechanism for APOA1 activation of LCAT activity in HDL

Journal

JOURNAL OF LIPID RESEARCH
Volume 59, Issue 7, Pages 1244-1255

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1194/jlr.M085332

Keywords

apolipoproteins; cholesterol metabolism; lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase; high density lipoprotein metabolism; high density lipoprotein; proteomics; electron microscopy; surface plasmon resonance; cholesterol; efflux; apolipoprotein A1

Funding

  1. American Heart Association [15PRE25220021]
  2. National Institutes of Health [R01 HL127649, P01 HL12803, RR027015, CA68485, DK20593, DK58404, DK59637, EY08126]

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APOA1 is the most abundant protein in HDL. It modulates interactions that affect HDL's cardioprotective functions, in part via its activation of the enzyme, LCAT. On nascent discoidal HDL, APOA1 comprises 10 -helical repeats arranged in an anti-parallel stacked-ring structure that encapsulates a lipid bilayer. Previous chemical cross-linking studies suggested that these APOA1 rings can adopt at least two different orientations, or registries, with respect to each other; however, the functional impact of these structural changes is unknown. Here, we placed cysteine residues at locations predicted to form disulfide bonds in each orientation and then measured APOA1's ability to adopt the two registries during HDL particle formation. We found that most APOA1 oriented with the fifth helix of one molecule across from fifth helix of the other (5/5 helical registry), but a fraction adopted a 5/2 registry. Engineered HDLs that were locked in 5/5 or 5/2 registries by disulfide bonds equally promoted cholesterol efflux from macrophages, indicating functional particles. However, unlike the 5/5 registry or the WT, the 5/2 registry impaired LCAT cholesteryl esterification activity (P < 0.001), despite LCAT binding equally to all particles. Chemical cross-linking studies suggest that full LCAT activity requires a hybrid epitope composed of helices 5-7 on one APOA1 molecule and helices 3-4 on the other. Thus, APOA1 may use a reciprocating thumbwheel-like mechanism to activate HDL-remodeling proteins.

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