Quantitative analysis of SR-BI-dependent HDL retroendocytosis in hepatocytes and fibroblasts

Previous studies have suggested that HDL retroendocytosis may play a role in scavenger receptor class B type I (SR-BI)-dependent selective lipid uptake in a cell-specific manner. To investigate this possibility, we developed methods to quantitatively measure HDL uptake and resecretion in fibroblast...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of lipid research 2006-08, Vol.47 (8), p.1700-1713
Hauptverfasser: Sun, Bing, Eckhardt, Erik R.M., Shetty, Shoba, van der Westhuyzen, Deneys R., Webb, Nancy R.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Previous studies have suggested that HDL retroendocytosis may play a role in scavenger receptor class B type I (SR-BI)-dependent selective lipid uptake in a cell-specific manner. To investigate this possibility, we developed methods to quantitatively measure HDL uptake and resecretion in fibroblast (COS-7) and hepatocyte (HepG2) cells expressing exogenous SR-BI. Approximately 17% and 24% of HDL associated in an SR-BI-dependent manner with COS-7 and HepG2 cells, respectively, accumulates intracellularly after a 10 min incubation. To determine whether this intracellular HDL undergoes retroendocytosis, we developed a pulse-chase assay whereby internalized biotinylated 125I-HDL3 secreted from cells is quantitatively precipitated from cell supernatants using immobilized streptavidin. Our results show a rapid secretion of a portion of intracellular HDL from both cell types (representing 4–7% of the total cell-associated HDL) that is almost complete within 30 min (half-life ∼ 10 min). In COS-7 cells, the calculated rate of HDL secretion (∼0.5 ng HDL/mg/min) was >30-fold slower than the rate of SR-BI-dependent selective cholesteryl ester (CE) uptake (∼17 ng HDL/mg/min), whereas the rate of release of HDL from the cell surface (∼19 ng HDL/mg/min) was similar to the rate of selective CE uptake. Notably, the rate of SR-BI-dependent HDL resecretion in COS-7 and HepG2 cells was similar. BLT1, a compound that inhibits selective CE uptake, does not alter the amount of SR-BI-mediated HDL retroendocytosis in COS-7 cells. From these data, we conclude that HDL retroendocytosis in COS-7 and HepG2 cells is similar and that the vast majority of SR-BI-dependent selective uptake occurs at the cell surface in both cell types.
ISSN:0022-2275
1539-7262
DOI:10.1194/jlr.M500450-JLR200