A key cardioprotective effect of high-density lipoprotein (HDL) involves the interaction of its major protein, apolipoprotein A-I (apoA-I), with ATP-binding cassette transporter A1 (ABCA1), a macrophage cholesterol exporter. ApoA I is thought to remove cholesterol from macrophages by a cascade of events. First it binds directly to ABCA1, activating signaling pathways, and then it binds to and solubilizes lipid domains generated by ABCA1.
HDL isolated from human atherosclerotic lesions and blood of subjects with established coronary artery disease contains elevated levels of 3-chlorotyrosine and 3-nitrotyrosine, two characteristic products of myeloperoxidase (MPO), a heme protein secreted by macrophages. Here we show that chlorination--but not nitration--of apoA-I by the MPO pathway impairs its ability to interact directly with ABCA1, to activate the Janus kinase 2 signaling pathway, and to promote efflux of cellular cholesterol. In contrast, oxidation of apoA-I has little effect on its ability to stabilize ABCA1 protein or to solubilize phospholipids.
Our results indicate that chlorination of apoA-I by the MPO pathway selectively inhibits two critical early events in cholesterol efflux: the binding of apoA-I to ABCA1 and activation of a key signaling pathway. Therefore, oxidation of apoA-I in the artery wall by MPO-generated chlorinating intermediates may contribute to atherogenesis by impairing cholesterol efflux from macrophages
Baohai Shao1, Chongren Tang1, Jay W. Heinecke1 and John F. Oram2,*
1 University of Washington, United States;
2 University of Washington Medical Center, United States