Leventhal A R, Chen W, Tall A R, Tabas I
Department of Medicine, Columbia University, New York, New York 10032, USA.
J Biol Chem. 2001 Nov 30;276(48):44976-83. doi: 10.1074/jbc.M106455200. Epub 2001 Sep 28.
Cholesterol efflux from macrophage foam cells, a key step in reverse cholesterol transport, requires trafficking of cholesterol from intracellular sites to the plasma membrane. Sphingomyelin is a cholesterol-binding molecule that transiently exists with cholesterol in endosomes and lysosomes but is rapidly hydrolyzed by lysosomal sphingomyelinase (L-SMase), a product of the acid sphingomyelinase (ASM) gene. We therefore hypothesized that sphingomyelin hydrolysis by L-SMase enables cholesterol efflux by preventing cholesterol sequestration by sphingomyelin. Macrophages from wild-type and ASM knockout mice were incubated with [(3)H]cholesteryl ester-labeled acetyl-LDL and then exposed to apolipoprotein A-I or high density lipoprotein. In both cases, [(3)H]cholesterol efflux was decreased substantially in the ASM knockout macrophages. Similar results were shown for ASM knockout macrophages labeled long-term with [(3)H]cholesterol added directly to medium, but not for those labeled for a short period, suggesting defective efflux from intracellular stores but not from the plasma membrane. Cholesterol trafficking to acyl-coenzyme A:cholesterol acyltransferase (ACAT) was also defective in ASM knockout macrophages. Using filipin to probe cholesterol in macrophages incubated with acetyl-LDL, we found there was modest staining in the plasma membrane of wild-type macrophages but bright, perinuclear fluorescence in ASM knockout macrophages. Last, when wild-type macrophages were incubated with excess sphingomyelin to "saturate" L-SMase, [(3)H]cholesterol efflux was decreased. Thus, sphingomyelin accumulation due to L-SMase deficiency leads to defective cholesterol trafficking and efflux, which we propose is due to sequestration of cholesterol by sphingomyelin and possibly other mechanisms. This model may explain the low plasma high density lipoprotein found in ASM-deficient humans and may implicate L-SMase deficiency and/or sphingomyelin enrichment of lipoproteins as novel atherosclerosis risk factors.
胆固醇从巨噬细胞泡沫细胞流出是逆向胆固醇转运的关键步骤,需要胆固醇从细胞内位点运输到质膜。鞘磷脂是一种胆固醇结合分子,它与胆固醇在内体和溶酶体中短暂共存,但会被溶酶体鞘磷脂酶(L-SMase,酸性鞘磷脂酶(ASM)基因的产物)迅速水解。因此,我们推测L-SMase介导的鞘磷脂水解可通过防止鞘磷脂隔离胆固醇来促进胆固醇流出。将野生型和ASM基因敲除小鼠的巨噬细胞与[³H]胆固醇酯标记的乙酰低密度脂蛋白一起孵育,然后暴露于载脂蛋白A-I或高密度脂蛋白。在这两种情况下,ASM基因敲除巨噬细胞中的[³H]胆固醇流出均显著减少。对于直接添加到培养基中并用[³H]胆固醇长期标记的ASM基因敲除巨噬细胞,也得到了类似的结果,但短期标记的细胞未出现这种情况,这表明细胞内储存部位的流出存在缺陷,而非质膜部位。在ASM基因敲除巨噬细胞中,胆固醇向酰基辅酶A:胆固醇酰基转移酶(ACAT)的运输也存在缺陷。用制霉菌素探测与乙酰低密度脂蛋白孵育的巨噬细胞中的胆固醇,我们发现野生型巨噬细胞的质膜有适度染色,而ASM基因敲除巨噬细胞有明亮的核周荧光。最后,当野生型巨噬细胞与过量鞘磷脂孵育以“饱和”L-SMase时,[³H]胆固醇流出减少。因此,由于L-SMase缺乏导致的鞘磷脂积累会导致胆固醇运输和流出缺陷,我们认为这是由于鞘磷脂以及可能的其他机制隔离胆固醇所致。该模型可能解释了ASM缺乏的人类中血浆高密度脂蛋白水平较低的现象,并可能暗示L-SMase缺乏和/或脂蛋白鞘磷脂富集是新出现的动脉粥样硬化风险因素。