Hayek T, Ito Y, Azrolan N, Verdery R B, Aalto-Setälä K, Walsh A, Breslow J L
Laboratory of Biochemical Genetics and Metabolism, Rockefeller University, New York 10021-6399.
J Clin Invest. 1993 Apr;91(4):1665-71. doi: 10.1172/JCI116375.
In humans, diets high in saturated fat and cholesterol raise HDL-cholesterol (HDL-C) levels. To explore the mechanism, we have devised a mouse model that mimics the human situation. In this model, HuAITg and control mice were studied on low fat (9% cal)-low cholesterol (57 mg/1,000 kcal) (chow) and high fat (41% cal)-high cholesterol (437 mg/1,000 kcal) (milk-fat based) diets. The mice responded to increased dietary fat by increasing both HDL-C and apo A-I levels, with a greater increase in HDL-C levels. This was compatible with an increase in HDL size observed by nondenaturing gradient gel electrophoresis. Turnover studies with doubly labeled HDL showed that dietary fat both increase the transport rate (TR) and decreased the fractional catabolic rate of HDL cholesterol ester (CE) and apo A-I, with the largest effect on HDL CE TR. The latter suggested that dietary fat increases reverse cholesterol transport through the HDL pathway, perhaps as an adaptation to the metabolic load of a high fat diet. The increase in apo A-I TR by dietary fat was confirmed by experiments showing increased apo A-I secretion from primary hepatocytes isolated from animals on the high fat diet. The increased apo A-I production was not associated with any increase in hepatic or intestinal apo A-I mRNA, suggesting that the mechanism of the dietary fat effect was posttranscriptional, involving either increased translatability of the apo A-I mRNA or less intracellular apo A-I degradation. The dietary fat-induced decrease in HDL CE and apo A-I fractional catabolic rate may have been caused by the increase in HDL particle size, as was suggested by our previous studies in humans. In summary, a mouse model has been developed and experiments performed to better understand the paradoxical HDL-raising effect of a high fat diet.
在人类中,富含饱和脂肪和胆固醇的饮食会提高高密度脂蛋白胆固醇(HDL-C)水平。为探究其机制,我们设计了一种模拟人类情况的小鼠模型。在此模型中,对HuAITg小鼠和对照小鼠进行了低脂(9%热量)-低胆固醇(57毫克/1000千卡)(普通饲料)和高脂(41%热量)-高胆固醇(437毫克/1000千卡)(基于乳脂肪)饮食的研究。小鼠通过提高HDL-C和载脂蛋白A-I(apo A-I)水平来应对饮食中脂肪的增加,其中HDL-C水平的增加更为显著。这与非变性梯度凝胶电泳观察到的HDL大小增加相一致。用双标记HDL进行的周转率研究表明,饮食中的脂肪既增加了转运速率(TR),又降低了HDL胆固醇酯(CE)和apo A-I的分解代谢率,对HDL CE TR的影响最大。后者表明,饮食中的脂肪通过HDL途径增加逆向胆固醇转运,这可能是对高脂饮食代谢负荷的一种适应。通过实验证实,高脂饮食动物分离的原代肝细胞中apo A-I分泌增加,从而证明了饮食中的脂肪增加了apo A-I的TR。apo A-I产量的增加与肝脏或肠道apo A-I mRNA的任何增加均无关,这表明饮食中脂肪作用的机制是转录后水平的,涉及apo A-I mRNA可翻译性的增加或细胞内apo A-I降解的减少。正如我们之前在人类中的研究所示,饮食中脂肪导致的HDL CE和apo A-I分解代谢率降低可能是由HDL颗粒大小的增加引起的。总之,我们已建立了一种小鼠模型并进行了实验,以更好地理解高脂饮食对HDL的矛盾升高作用。