Free Cholesterol Determines Reassembled High-Density
Lipoprotein Phospholipid Phase Structure and Stability
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Abstract
Reassembled high-density lipoproteins
(rHDL) of various sizes and
compositions containing apo A-I or apo A-II as their sole protein,
dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC), and various amounts of free
cholesterol (FC) have been isolated and analyzed by differential scanning
calorimetry (DSC) and by circular dichroism to determine their stability
and the temperature dependence of their helical content. Our data
show that the multiple rHDL species obtained at each FC mole percent
usually do not have the same FC mole percent as the starting mixture
and that the size of the multiple species increases in a quantized
way with their respective FC mole percent. DSC studies reveal multiple
phases or domains that can be classified as virtual DMPC, which contains
a small amount of DMPC that slightly reduces the melting temperature
(<i>T</i><sub>m</sub>), a boundary phase that is adjacent
to the apo A-I or apo A-II that circumscribes the discoidal rHDL,
and a mixed FC/DMPC phase that has a <i>T</i><sub>m</sub> that increases with FC mole percent. Only the large rHDL contain
virtual DMPC, whereas all contain boundary phase and various amounts
of the mixed FC/DMPC phase according to increasing size and FC mole
percent. As reported by others, FC stabilizes the rHDL. For rHDL (apo
A-II) compared to rHDL (apo A-I), this occurs in spite of the reduced
number of helical regions that mediate binding to the DMPC surface.
This effect is attributed to the very high lipophilicity of apo A-II
and the reduction in the polarity of the interface between DMPC and
the aqueous phase with an increasing FC mole percent, an effect that
is expected to increase the strength of the hydrophobic associations
with the nonpolar face of the amphipathic helices of apo A-II. These
data are relevant to the differential effects of FC and apolipoprotein
species on intracellular and plasma membrane nascent HDL assembly
and subsequent remodeling by plasma proteins