Glycosylation of Low-Density Lipoprotein Enhances Cholesteryl Ester Synthesis in Human Monocyte-Derived Macrophages

Author:

Lopes-Virella Maria F1,Klein Richard L1,Lyons Timothy J1,Stevenson Henry C1,Witztum Joseph L1

Affiliation:

1. Veterans Administration Medical Center and Endocrinology-Metabolism-Nutrition Division, Department of Medicine, Medical University of South Carolina Charleston, South Carolina Biological Response Modifiers Program, National Institutes of Health Frederick, Maryland Division of Metabolic Disease, Department of Medicine, University of California at San Diego La Jolla, California

Abstract

Glucose can react with the lysine residues of low-density lipoproteins (LDLs) and convert the lipoprotein to a form with a receptor-mediated uptake by cultured cells that is impaired. However, in contrast to other modified lipoproteins taken up by both murine and human macrophages via the scavenger-receptor pathway that may induce the formation of foam cells, glycosylated LDL is not recognized by murine macrophages, and thus far, it has not been shown to lead to marked intracellular accumulation of cholesterol in human macrophages. This study illustrates that glycosylated LDL incubated with human monocyte-derived macrophages, at a concentration of 100 micrograms LDL/ml medium, stimulates significantly more cholesteryl ester (CE) synthesis than does control LDL (10.65 ± 1.5 vs. 4.8 ± 0.13 nmol.· mg−1 cell protein · 20 h−1; P < .05). At LDL concentrations similar to those of plasma, the rate of CE synthesis in macrophages incubated with glycosylated LDL is more markedly enhanced than that observed in cells incubated with control LDL (3-fold increase). The marked stimulation of CE synthesis in human macrophages exposed to glycosylated LDL is paralleled by a significant increase in CE accumulation in these cells (P < .001). The increase in CE synthesis and accumulation seem to be mediated by an increase in the degradation of glycosylated LDL by human macrophages. Glycosylated LDL enters the macrophages and is degraded by the classic LDL-receptor pathway in slightly smaller amounts than control LDL, but its degradation by pathways other than the classic LDL receptor or scavenger receptor is markedly enhanced. These studies have shown a possible mechanism by which glycosylation of LDL may lead to the formation of foam cells and contribute to the acceleration of atherosclerosis in diabetes mellitus.

Publisher

American Diabetes Association

Subject

Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism,Internal Medicine

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