Literature DB >> 15169972

Differential effects of low-density lipoprotein and chylomicron remnants on lipid accumulation in human macrophages.

Kelly V Batt1, Michael Avella, Elizabeth H Moore, Brian Jackson, Keith E Suckling, Kathleen M Botham.   

Abstract

The effects of low-density lipoprotein (LDL) and chylomicron remnants on lipid accumulation in human monocyte-derived macrophages (HMDMs) and in macrophages derived from the human monocyte cell line THP-1 were compared. The HMDMs or THP-1 macrophages were incubated with LDL, oxidized LDL (oxLDL), chylomicron remnant-like particles (CMR-LPs), or oxidized CMR-LPs (oxCMR-LPs), and the amount and type of lipid accumulated were determined. As expected, the lipid content of both cell types was increased markedly by oxLDL but not LDL, and this was due to a rise in cholesterol, cholesteryl ester (CE), and triacylglycerol (TG) levels. In contrast, both CMR-LPs and oxCMR-LPs caused a considerable increase in cellular lipid in HMDMs and THP-1 macrophages, but in this case there was a greater rise in the TG than in the cholesterol or CE content. Lipid accumulation in response to oxLDL, CMR-LPs, and oxCMR-LPs was prevented by the ACAT inhibitor CI976 in HMDMs but not in THP-1 macrophages, where TG levels remained markedly elevated. The rate of incorporation of [(3)H]oleate into CE and TG in THP-1 macrophages was increased by oxLDL, CMR-LPs, and oxCMR-LPs, but incorporation into TG was increased to a greater extent with CMR-LPs and oxCMR-LPs compared with oxLDL. These results demonstrate that both CMR-LPs and oxCMR-LPs cause lipid accumulation in human macrophages comparable to that seen with oxLDL and that oxidation of the remnant particles does not enhance this effect. They also demonstrate that a greater proportion of the lipid accumulated in response to CMR-LPs compared with oxLDL is TG rather than cholesterol or CE and that this is associated with a higher rate of TG synthesis. This study, therefore, provides further evidence to suggest that chylomicron remnants have a role in foam cell formation that is distinct from that of oxLDL.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15169972     DOI: 10.1177/153537020422900611

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Exp Biol Med (Maywood)        ISSN: 1535-3699


  19 in total

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4.  Chylomicron remnants and oxidised low density lipoprotein have differential effects on the expression of mRNA for genes involved in human macrophage foam cell formation.

Authors:  Kelly V Batt; Lisa Patel; Kathleen M Botham; Keith E Suckling
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Authors:  Paul N Hopkins; Eliot A Brinton; M Nazeem Nanjee
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9.  Suppression of nuclear factor-kappaB activity in macrophages by chylomicron remnants: modulation by the fatty acid composition of the particles.

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