ATP-Binding Cassette Transporter G1 and High-Density Lipoprotein Promote Endothelial NO Synthesis Through a Decrease in the Interaction of Caveolin-1 and Endothelial NO Synthase

Author:

Terasaka Naoki1,Westerterp Marit1,Koetsveld Joris1,Fernández-Hernando Carlos1,Yvan-Charvet Laurent1,Wang Nan1,Sessa William C.1,Tall Alan R.1

Affiliation:

1. From the Division of Molecular Medicine (N.T., M.W., J.K., L.Y.-C., N.W., and A.R.T.), the Department of Medicine, Columbia University, New York, NY; and the Department of Pharmacology and Vascular Biology and the Therapeutics Program (C.F.-H. and W.C.S.), Boyer Center for Molecular Medicine, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Conn.

Abstract

Objective— To investigate whether cholesterol efflux to high-density lipoprotein (HDL) via ATP-binding cassette transporter G1 (ABCG1) modulates the interaction of caveolin (Cav) 1 and endothelial NO synthase (eNOS). Methods and Results— ABCG1 promotes cholesterol and 7-oxysterol efflux from endothelial cells (ECs) to HDL. It was previously reported that ABCG1 protects against dietary cholesterol-induced endothelial dysfunction by promoting the efflux of 7-oxysterols to HDL. Increased cholesterol loading in ECs is known to cause an inhibitory interaction between Cav-1 and eNOS and impaired NO release. In human aortic ECs, free cholesterol loading promoted the interaction of Cav-1 with eNOS, reducing eNOS activity. These effects of cholesterol loading were reversed by HDL in an ABCG1-dependent manner. HDL also reversed the inhibition of eNOS by cholesterol loading in murine lung ECs, but this effect of HDL was abolished in Cav-1–deficient murine lung ECs. Increased interaction of Cav-1 with eNOS was also detected in aortic homogenates of high-cholesterol diet–fed Abcg1 −/− mice, paralleling a decrease in eNOS activity and impaired endothelial function. Conclusion— The promotion of cholesterol efflux via ABCG1 results in a reduced inhibitory interaction of eNOS with Cav-1.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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