Author/Editor     Contreras, JA; Lasuncion, MA
Title     Essential differences in cholesteryl ester metabolism between human monocyte-derived and J774 macrophages. Evidence against the presence of hormone-sensitive lipase in human macrophages
Type     članek
Source     Arterioscler Thromb
Vol. and No.     Letnik 14, št. 3
Publication year     1994
Volume     str. 443-52
Language     eng
Abstract     Cholesteryl ester-laden macrophages are the hallmark of the fatty streaks that precede arteriosclerotic plaques in humans and experimental animals. This article studies several aspects of cytoplasmic cholesteryl ester metabolism in cultured human monocyte-derived macrophages. Adenosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate (cAMP) consistently inhibited cholesteryl ester mobilization from cells that had been loaded with cholesteryl esters by preincubation with acetylated low-density lipoprotein. This effect was observed in both the absence and presence of extracellular cholesterol acceptors as well as with acyl coenzyme A: cholesterol acyltransferase inhibitors. In contrast, dibutyryl cAMP activated cholesteryl ester hydrolysis in J774 macrophages. Since hormone-sensitive lipase is thought to be responsible for the neutral cholesteryl ester hydrolytic activity in several cell types, we looked for the presence of its mRNA in our macrophages by means of reverse transcription coupled to the polymerase chain reaction technique. Hormone-sensitive lipase mRNA was detected in J774 macrophages but not in human monocytes or in human monocyte-derived macrophages. These results demonstrated great differences in cholesteryl ester metabolism between macrophages of different origin. While hormone-sensitive lipase may be responsible for neutral cholesteryl ester hydrolytic activity in J774 macrophages, in human monocyte-derived macrophages it is not; thus, a different and as yet unidentified enzyme must be present.
Descriptors     CHOLESTEROL ESTERS
MACROPHAGES
MONOCYTES
BASE SEQUENCE
BUCLADESINE
CELL ADHESION
CELL SURVIVAL
CELLS, CULTURED
CHOLESTEROL ESTERASE
HYDROLYSIS
MOLECULAR SEQUENCE DATA
POLYMERASE CHAIN REACTION
RNA, MESSENGER