Abstract

The influence of the acyl-CoA: cholesterol O-acyltransferase (ACAT) inhibitor, CL 277082, on macrophage cholesteryl ester accumulation in a rabbit carrageenan granuloma macrophage-foam cell model was studied. Diets were supplemented with 0.3% cholesterol and 6% peanut oil with or without the inhibitor (0.25%) for 4 weeks prior to granuloma induction, and macrophage-rich granuloma tissue was harvested 14 days after carrageenan injection. Serum cholesterol was monitored biweekly, and plasma lipoproteins were isolated terminally. Total, free and esterified cholesterol contents were measured in hepatic and granuloma tissue. In hepatic tissue, administration of CL 277082 resulted in an 80% reduction in the content of total cholesterol, a 37% decrease in free cholesterol, and a 90% decrease in esterified cholesterol. Similarly, in macrophage-rich granuloma tissue, total cholesterol content was decreased by 44%, and esterified cholesterol content by 61%, with no change in free cholesterol. Additionally, CL 277082 was shown to inhibit granuloma tissue ACAT activity by 45%, VLDL mass was decreased slightly, LDL mass increased 3.4-fold and HDL mass was similar in both the inhibitor-treated and control animals. CL 277082 resulted in a 57% decrease in VLDL cholesteryl ester content and a 4.5-fold increase in triacylglycerol. Cholesteryl ester content in LDL was decreased by 31% and LDL triacylglycerol was increased 5.2-fold, while the only change in HDL composition was a 3.5-fold increase in triacylglycerol. The reductions in both hepatic tissue and macrophage-rich granuloma tissue esterified cholesterol accumulation are considered to be due largely to cellular ACAT inhibition, and the altered distribution and composition of the plasma lipoproteins.

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