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Reactive Dicarbonyl Scavenging Effectively Reduces MPO-Mediated Oxidation of HDL and Preserves HDL Atheroprotective Functions

Authors :
Patricia G. Yancey
Mark S. Borja
Loren E. Smith
Huan Tao
Jiansheng Huang
MacRae F. Linton
Sean S. Davies
Kon
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2019.

Abstract

High-density lipoprotein (HDL) is atheroprotective by mediating cholesterol efflux, anti-inflammatory, and anti-oxidation functions. Atheroprotective functions of HDL are related to the activity of HDL-associated enzymes such as paraoxonase 1 (PON1). We examined the impact of inhibition of myeloperoxidase (MPO)-mediated HDL oxidation by PON1 on HDL malondialdehyde (MDA) content and HDL function. In the presence of PON1, crosslinking of apoAI in response to MPO-mediated oxidation of HDL was abolished and MDA-HDL adduct levels were decreased. In addition, PON1 prevented the impaired cholesterol efflux capacity of MPO-oxidized HDL fromApoe-/-macrophages. Direct modification of HDL with MDA increased apoAI crosslinking and reduced the cholesterol efflux capacity in a dose dependent manner. In addition, MDA modification of HDL reduced its anti-inflammatory function compared to native HDL as the expression of IL-1β and IL6 increased by 3-(pApoe-/-macrophages in response to LPS. MDA-HDL also had impaired ability to increase PON1 activity. Importantly, HDL from subjects with familial hypercholesterolemia (FH-HDL) versus controls had increased MDA-apoAI adducts, and normalization of the PON1 activity to PON1 mass revealed a 24 % (pApoe-/-macrophages compared to incubation with LPS alone. FH-HDL versus control HDL also had an impaired ability to promote cholesterol efflux fromApoe-/-macrophages. Interestingly, reactive dicarbonyl scavengers effectively abolished MPO-mediated apoAI crosslinking, MDA adduct formation, and improved cholesterol efflux capacity. Importantly, in vivo treatment of hypercholesterolemic mice with reactive dicarbonyl scavengers effectively reduced MDA-HDL adduct formation and increased PON1 activity and HDL cholesterol efflux capacity, supporting a therapeutic potential of reactive carbonyl scavenging in maintaining HDL function.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....046b72696d809872ca39c10864cec81d
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/528026