1 research outputs found
Induction of adrenal scavenger receptor BI and increased high density lipoprotein-cholesteryl ether uptake by in vivo inhibition of hepatic lipase
Hepatic lipase (HL) and scavenger receptor type B class I (SR-BI) have
both been implicated in high density lipoprotein (HDL)-cholesteryl ester
uptake in cholesterol-utilizing tissues. Inactivation of HL by
gene-directed targeting in mice results in up-regulation of SR-BI
expression in adrenal gland (Wang, N., Weng, W., Breslow, J. L., and Tall,
A. R. (1996) J. Biol. Chem. 271, 21001-21004). The net effect on
HDL-cholesteryl ester uptake is not known. We determined the impact of
acute in vivo inhibition of rat adrenal HL activity by antibodies on SR-BI
expression and on human and rat HDL-[3H]cholesteryl ether (CEth) uptake in
the adrenal gland. Rat HDL was isolated from rats in which HL activity had
been inhibited for 1 h. The rats were studied under basal conditions (not
ACTH-treated) and after previous treatment with ACTH for 6 days
(ACTH-treated). Intravenous injection of anti-HL resulted in 70% lowering
of adrenal HL activity in both conditions which were maintained for at
least 8 h. In not ACTH-treated rats, inhibition of adrenal HL increased
adrenal SR-BI mRNA (5.2-fold) and mass (1. 6-fold) within 4 h. HL
inhibition resulted in 41% and 14% more adrenal accumulation of human
HDL-[3H]CEth during 4 and 24 h, respectively. The adrenal uptake of rat
HDL-[3H]CEth increased by 68%, 4 h after the antibody injection. ACTH
treatment increased total adrenal HL activity from 3.7 +/- 0.5 milliunits
to 34.0 +/- 17. 2 milliunits, as well as adrenal SR-BI mRNA from 2.9 +/-
0.7 arbitrary units (A.U.) to 86.8 +/- 41.1 A.U. and SR-BI mass from 7.7
+/- 1.8 A.U. to 63.16 +/- 46.7 A.U. The human HDL-[3H]CEth uptake by
adrenals was also significantly increased from 0.58 +/- 0.11% of injected
dose to 7.24 +/- 1.58% of injected dose. Inhibition of adrenal HL activity
did not result in further induction of SR-BI expression and did not affect
human HDL-[3H]CEth uptake. These findings indicate that SR-BI expression
may be influenced by changes in HL activity. HL activity is not needed for
the SR-BI-mediated HDL-cholester