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The murine macrophage apoB-48 receptor gene (Apob-48r)homology to the human receptor1

Authors :
Matthew L. Brown
Katsumasa Yui
Jonathan D. Smith
Renée C. LeBoeuf
Wei Weng
Patrick K. Umeda
Ran Li
Ruiling Song
Sandra H. Gianturco
William A. Bradley
Source :
Journal of Lipid Research, Vol 43, Iss 8, Pp 1181-1191 (2002)
Publication Year :
2002
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2002.

Abstract

Previously we cloned the human macrophage apolipoprotein B-48 receptor (ApoB-48R) and documented its expression in human atherosclerotic foam cells (1). Now we have identified and characterized the murine macrophage apob-48r cDNA gene sequence and its chromasomal location. The cDNA (3,615 bp) -deduced amino acid (aa) sequence (942 aa) is ∼45% identical to the human macrophage APOB-48R, but not to other known gene families. The murine Apob-48r gene, like the human APOB-48R gene, consists of four exons interrupted by three small introns and is syntenically located on chromosome 7. Functionally significant conserved domains include an N-terminal hydrophobic domain, a glycosaminoglycan attachment site, an N-glycosylation site, and an ExxxLL internalization motif C-terminal to the putative internal transmembrane domain. Two conserved coiled-coil domains are likely involved in the spontaneous homodimerization that generates the active dimeric ligand binding species (mouse, ∼190 kDa; human, ∼200 kDa). Transfection of the murine apoB-48R into Chinese hamster ovary cells (CHOs) confers apoB-48R function: rapid, high-affinity, specific uptake of known triglyceride-rich lipoprotein ligands of the apoB-48R and, of note, uptake of the cholesteryl ester-rich apoB-48-containing very low density lipoproteins that accumulate in atherosclerosis-prone apoE-deficient mice. Uptake of these ligands by murine apoB-48R-transfected CHOs causes saturable, visible cellular triglyceride and cholesterol accumulation in vitro that resemble foam cells of atherosclerotic lesions.In aggregate, the data presented here and that previously published suggest that the apoE-independent murine apoB-48R pathway may contribute to the spontaneous development of atherosclerotic lesions rich in macrophage-derived foam cells observed in apoE-deficient mice, a murine model of human atherosclerosis.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00222275
Volume :
43
Issue :
8
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Journal of Lipid Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.264069dc3694ec2b31db995a43c7f46
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1194/jlr.M100395-JLR200