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Biotech / Medical : ESPR
ESPR 2.970+4.6%3:59 PM EDT

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To: keokalani'nui who wrote (4)5/13/2002 10:59:13 AM
From: tuck   of 16
 
Still follow this one, Wilder? Just found it, myself, and decided to update Jason's abstract search . . .

>>Circulation 2001 Jun 26;103(25):3047-50

High-dose recombinant apolipoprotein A-I(milano) mobilizes tissue cholesterol and rapidly reduces plaque lipid and macrophage content in apolipoprotein e-deficient mice. Potential implications for acute plaque stabilization.

Shah PK, Yano J, Reyes O, Chyu KY, Kaul S, Bisgaier CL, Drake S, Cercek B.

Atherosclerosis Research Center, the Division of Cardiology, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center and UCLA School of Medicine, Los Angeles, Calif and Esperion Therapeutics Inc, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA. shahp@cshs.org

BACKGROUND: Repeated doses of recombinant apolipoprotein A-I(Milano) phospholipid complex (apoA-I(m)) reduce atherosclerosis and favorably change plaque composition in rabbits and mice. In this study, we tested whether a single high dose of recombinant apoA-I(m) could rapidly mobilize tissue cholesterol and reduce plaque lipid and macrophage content in apoE-deficient mice. METHODS AND RESULTS: High cholesterol-fed, 26-week-old apoE-deficient mice received a single intravenous injection of saline (n=16), 1080 mg/kg dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC; n=14), or 400 mg/kg of recombinant apoA-I(m) complexed with DPPC (1:2.7 weight ratio; n=18). Blood was sampled before and 1 and 48 hours after injection, and aortic root plaques were evaluated for lipid content and macrophage content after oil-red O and immunostaining, respectively. One hour after injection, the plasma cholesterol efflux-promoting capacity was nearly 2-fold higher in recombinant apoA-I(m)-treated mice compared with saline and DPPC-treated mice (P<0.01). Compared with baseline values, serum free cholesterol, an index of tissue cholesterol mobilization, increased 1.6-fold by 1 hour after recombinant apoA-I(m) injection, and it remained significantly elevated at 48 hours (P<0.01). Mice receiving recombinant apoA-I(m) had 40% to 50% lower lipid content (P<0.01) and 29% to 36% lower macrophage content (P<0.05) in their plaques compared with the saline- and DPPC-treated mice, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: A single high dose of recombinant apoA-I(m) rapidly mobilizes tissue cholesterol and reduces plaque lipid and macrophage content in apoE-deficient mice. These findings suggest that this strategy could rapidly change plaque composition toward a more stable phenotype.<<

>>Biochemistry 2002 Feb 12;41(6):2089-96

Apolipoprotein A-I(Milano) and apolipoprotein A-I(Paris) exhibit an antioxidant activity distinct from that of wild-type apolipoprotein A-I.

Bielicki JK, Oda MN.

Genome Sciences Department, Life Sciences Division, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, California 94720, USA. jkbielicki@lbl.gov

Apolipoprotein A-I(Milano) (apoA-I(Milano)) and apoA-I(Paris) are rare cysteine variants of apoA-I that produce a HDL deficiency in the absence of cardiovascular disease in humans. This paradox provides the basis for the hypothesis that the cysteine variants possess a beneficial activity not associated with wild-type apoA-I (apoA-I(WT)). In this study, a unique antioxidant activity of apoA-I(Milano) and apoA-I(Paris) is described. ApoA-I(Milano) was twice as effective as apoA-I(Paris) in preventing lipoxygenase-mediated oxidation of phospholipids, whereas apoA-I(WT) was poorly active. Antioxidant activity was observed using the monomeric form of the variants and was equally effective before and after initiation of oxidative events. ApoA-I(Milano) protected phospholipid from reactive oxygen species (ROS) generated via xanthine/xanthine oxidase (X/Xo) but failed to inhibit X/Xo-induced reduction of cytochrome c. These results indicate that apoA-I(Milano) was unable to directly quench ROS in the aqueous phase. There were no differences between lipid-free apoA-I(Milano,) apoA-I(Paris), and apoA-I(WT) in mediating the efflux of cholesterol from macrophages, indicating that the cysteine variants interacted normally with the ABCA1 efflux pathway. The results indicate that incorporation of a free thiol within an amphipathic alpha helix of apoA-I confers an antioxidant activity distinct from that of apoA-I(WT). These studies are the first to relate gain of function to rare cysteine mutations in the apoA-I primary sequence.<<

>>Biochemistry 2001 Mar 27;40(12):3666-73

Cholesterol mobilization by free and lipid-bound apoAI(Milano) and apoAI(Milano)-apoAII heterodimers.

Wang WQ, Moses AS, Francis GA.

CIHR Group on Molecular and Cell Biology of Lipids and Department of Medicine, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.

Despite very low plasma levels of HDL, carriers of the apolipoprotein AI Arg173 --> Cys mutation apoAI(Milano) (AIM) have no apparent increase in risk for atherosclerotic vascular disease. HDL apolipoprotein species in AIM carriers include apoAI-AII heterodimers, previously found to confer the enhanced ability of tyrosyl radical-oxidized HDL to mobilize cholesterol for removal from cultured cells. To determine whether enhanced mobilization of cholesterol by apoprotein species in AIM explains a cardioprotective action of this mutation, we examined the ability of lipid-free and lipid-bound AIM and AIM-AII heterodimers to deplete cholesterol from cultured cells. Free AIM and AIM-AII heterodimers showed a decreased capacity to act as acceptors of cholesterol from cholesterol-loaded human fibroblasts compared with native apoAI but similar capacities to deplete fibroblasts of the pool of cholesterol available for esterification by acyl-CoA:cholesterol acyltransferase (ACAT). Discoidal reconstituted HDL (rHDL) containing apoAI depleted both of these cholesterol pools more readily than AIM-containing rHDL when compared at equivalent rHDL protein levels, but similar abilities of these rHDL to deplete cell cholesterol were seen when compared at equivalent phospholipid levels. Spherical rHDL generated using the whole lipid fraction of HDL and apoAI or AIM showed similar capacities to deplete total and ACAT-accessible cell cholesterol when compared at similar protein levels, but an increased capacity of AIM-containing particles was seen when compared at equivalent phospholipid levels. Unlike the apoAI-AII heterodimer in tyrosylated HDL, AIM-AII heterodimer-containing spherical rHDL showed no increased capacity to deplete either of these pools of cholesterol. These results suggest a similar or better capacity of native apoAI in lipid-free or lipid-bound form in discoidal rHDL to enhance the mobilization of cellular cholesterol when compared to AIM in its free or lipid-bound forms. Any increase in depletion of cellular cholesterol by lipid-bound AIM in spherical rHDL appears related to altered phospholipid-binding rather than intrinsic cholesterol-mobilizing characteristics of this protein compared to native apoAI. The lack of major differences in these studies in cholesterol mobilization by native apoAI and AIM, or by apoAIM-AII heterodimers, suggests that any protection against atherosclerosis conferred by this mutation is likely related to other beneficial vascular effects of AIM.<<

Cheers, Tuck
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