Abstract

HDLs prevent atherosclerosis by removing excess cell cholesterol. Lipid composition affects HDL functions in cholesterol removal, yet its effects on the disk stability remain unclear. We hypothesize that reduced length or increased cis-unsaturation of phosphatidylcholine acyl chains destabilize discoidal HDL and promote protein dissociation and lipoprotein fusion. To test this hypothesis, we determined thermal stability of binary complexes reconstituted from apoC-I and diacyl PCs containing 12-18 carbons with 0-2 cis-double bonds. Kinetic analysis using circular dichroism shows that, for fully saturated PCs, chain length increase by two carbons stabilizes lipoprotein by deltaDeltaG* (37 degrees C) congruent with 1.4 kcal/mol, suggesting that hydrophobic interactions dominate the disk stability; distinct effects of pH and salt indicate contribution of electrostatic interactions. Similarly, apoA-I-containing disks show increased stability with increasing chain length. Acyl chain unsaturation reduces disk stability. In summary, stability of discoidal HDL correlates directly with fatty acyl chain length and saturation: the longer and more fully saturated are the chains, the more extensive are the stabilizing lipid-protein and lipid-lipid interactions and the higher is the free energy barrier for protein dissociation and lipoprotein fusion. This sheds new light on the existing data of cholesterol efflux to discoidal HDL and suggests that moderate lipoprotein destabilization facilitates cholesterol insertion.

Highlights

  • HDLs prevent atherosclerosis by removing excess cell cholesterol

  • The results of our earlier [16, 24, 25] and current studies using binary complexes of proteins and lipids (DMPC, dipalmitoyl phosphatidyl cholines (PC) (DPPC), distearoyl PC (DSPC)) consistently show that such diameter variations have no significant effect on thermal stability of the disks measured in the melting or kinetic T-jump experiments

  • The results reveal that stability of binary discoidal protein:PC complexes increases with increasing acyl chain length and saturation (Figs. 4–6 and Table 1)

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Summary

Introduction

HDLs prevent atherosclerosis by removing excess cell cholesterol. Lipid composition affects HDL functions in cholesterol removal, yet its effects on the disk stability remain unclear. We hypothesize that reduced length or increased cis-unsaturation of phosphatidylcholine acyl chains destabilize discoidal HDL and promote protein dissociation and lipoprotein fusion. To test this hypothesis, we determined thermal stability of binary complexes reconstituted from apoC-I and diacyl PCs containing 12–18 carbons with 0–2 cis-double bonds. Stability of discoidal HDL correlates directly with fatty acyl chain length and saturation: the longer and more fully saturated are the chains, the more extensive are the stabilizing lipid-protein and lipid-lipid interactions and the higher is the free energy barrier for protein dissociation and lipoprotein fusion. Lipid composition may affect stability of HDL assembly, thereby altering the rate of Abbreviations: apo, apolipoprotein; CD, circular dichroism; DLPC, dilauroyl PC; DMPC, dimyristoyl PC; DPPC, dipalmitoyl PC; DSC, differential scanning calorimetry; DSPC, distearoyl PC; EM, electron microscopy; PC, phosphatidylcholine; PLPC, palmitoyl-linoleoyl PC; POPC, palmitoyl-oleoyl PC; RCT, reverse cholesterol transport; rHDL, reconstituted HDL; T-jump, temperature jump

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