Abstract

Apolipoprotein (apo) E mediates lipoprotein remnant clearance via interaction with cell-surface heparan sulfate proteoglycans. Both the 22-kDa N-terminal domain and 10-kDa C-terminal domain of apoE contain a heparin binding site; the N-terminal site overlaps with the low density lipoprotein receptor binding region and the C-terminal site is undefined. To understand the molecular details of the apoE-heparin interaction, we defined the microenvironments of all 12 lysine residues in intact apoE3 and examined their relative contributions to heparin binding. Nuclear magnetic resonance measurements showed that, in apoE3-dimyristoyl phosphatidylcholine discs, Lys-143 and -146 in the N-terminal domain and Lys-233 in the C-terminal domain have unusually low pK(a) values, indicating high positive electrostatic potential around these residues. Binding experiments using heparin-Sepharose gel demonstrated that the lipid-free 10-kDa fragment interacted strongly with heparin and a point mutation K233Q largely abolished the binding, indicating that Lys-233 is involved in heparin binding and that an unusually basic lysine microenvironment is critical for the interaction with heparin. With lipidated apoE3, it is confirmed that the Lys-233 site is completely masked and the N-terminal site mediates heparin binding. In addition, mutations of the two heparin binding sites in intact apoE3 demonstrated the dominant role of the N-terminal site in the heparin binding of apoE even in the lipid-free state. These results suggest that apoE interacts predominately with cell-surface heparan sulfate proteoglycans through the N-terminal binding site. However, Lys-233 may be involved in the binding of apoE to certain cell-surface sites, such as the protein core of biglycan.

Highlights

  • Apolipoprotein E mediates lipoprotein remnant clearance via interaction with cell-surface heparan sulfate proteoglycans

  • These results suggest that Apolipoprotein E (apoE) interacts predominately with cell-surface heparan sulfate proteoglycans through the N-terminal binding site

  • PKa Values of Lysines in Full-length ApoE3—Previously, we used two-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectra of [13C]dimethyl lysines to study the microenvironments of the eight lysine residues in 22-kDa apoE-dimyristoyl phosphatidylcholine (DMPC) complexes [19, 20]

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Summary

Introduction

Apolipoprotein (apo) E mediates lipoprotein remnant clearance via interaction with cell-surface heparan sulfate proteoglycans Both the 22-kDa N-terminal domain and 10-kDa C-terminal domain of apoE contain a heparin binding site; the N-terminal site overlaps with the low density lipoprotein receptor binding region and the Cterminal site is undefined. Mutations of the two heparin binding sites in intact apoE3 demonstrated the dominant role of the N-terminal site in the heparin binding of apoE even in the lipid-free state These results suggest that apoE interacts predominately with cell-surface heparan sulfate proteoglycans through the N-terminal binding site. The N-terminal domain exists in the lipid-free state as a four-helix bundle of amphipathic ␣-helices and contains the LDL receptor binding region (residues 136 – 150 in helix 4) [17]. A site-directed mutagenesis study showed that Arg142, Lys-143, Arg-145, Lys-146, and Arg-147 are required for

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