Rudel L L, Lee R G, Cockman T L
Arteriosclerosis Research Program, Department of Pathology, Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, North Carolina 27157, USA.
Curr Opin Lipidol. 2001 Apr;12(2):121-7. doi: 10.1097/00041433-200104000-00005.
Two enzymes are responsible for cholesterol ester formation in tissues, acyl coenzyme A:cholesterol acyltransferase types 1 and 2 (ACAT1 and ACAT2). The available evidence suggests different cell locations, membrane orientations, and metabolic functions for each enzyme. ACAT1 and ACAT2 gene disruption experiments in mice have shown complementary results, with ACAT1 being responsible for cholesterol homeostasis in the brain, skin, adrenal, and macrophages. ACAT1 -/- mice have less atherosclerosis than their ACAT1 +/+ counterparts, presumably because of the decreased ACAT activity in the macrophages. By contrast, ACAT2 -/- mice have limited cholesterol absorption in the intestine, and decreased cholesterol ester content in the liver and plasma lipoproteins. Almost no cholesterol esterification was found when liver and intestinal microsomes from ACAT2 -/- mice were assayed. Studies in non-human primates have shown the presence of ACAT1 primarily in the Kupffer cells of the liver, in non-mucosal cell types in the intestine, and in kidney and adrenal cortical cells, whereas ACAT2 is present only in hepatocytes and in intestinal mucosal cells. The membrane topology for ACAT1 and ACAT2 is also apparently different, with ACAT1 having a serine essential for activity on the cytoplasmic side of the endoplasmic reticulum membrane, whereas the analogous serine is present on the lumenal side of the endoplasmic reticulum for ACAT2. Taken together, the data suggest that cholesterol ester formation by ACAT1 supports separate functions compared with cholesterol esterification by ACAT2. The latter enzyme appears to be responsible for cholesterol ester formation and secretion in lipoproteins, whereas ACAT1 appears to function to maintain appropriate cholesterol availability in cell membranes.
有两种酶负责组织中胆固醇酯的形成,即1型和2型酰基辅酶A:胆固醇酰基转移酶(ACAT1和ACAT2)。现有证据表明这两种酶具有不同的细胞定位、膜取向和代谢功能。对小鼠进行的ACAT1和ACAT2基因敲除实验显示出互补的结果,ACAT1负责大脑、皮肤、肾上腺和巨噬细胞中的胆固醇稳态。与ACAT1 +/+ 小鼠相比,ACAT1 -/- 小鼠的动脉粥样硬化程度较低,这可能是因为巨噬细胞中ACAT活性降低。相比之下,ACAT2 -/- 小鼠肠道中的胆固醇吸收受限,肝脏和血浆脂蛋白中的胆固醇酯含量降低。对ACAT2 -/- 小鼠的肝脏和肠道微粒体进行检测时,几乎未发现胆固醇酯化现象。对非人类灵长类动物的研究表明,ACAT1主要存在于肝脏的库普弗细胞、肠道的非黏膜细胞类型以及肾脏和肾上腺皮质细胞中,而ACAT2仅存在于肝细胞和肠道黏膜细胞中。ACAT1和ACAT2的膜拓扑结构也明显不同,ACAT1在内质网膜细胞质侧有一个对活性至关重要的丝氨酸,而ACAT2的类似丝氨酸存在于内质网腔侧。综上所述,数据表明与ACAT2催化的胆固醇酯化相比,ACAT1催化的胆固醇酯形成支持不同的功能。后一种酶似乎负责脂蛋白中胆固醇酯的形成和分泌,而ACAT1似乎起到维持细胞膜中适当胆固醇可用性的作用。