Abstract

Lecithin:retinol acyltransferase (LRAT), present in microsomes, catalyzes the transfer of the sn-1 fatty acid of phosphatidylcholine to retinol bound to a cellular retinol-binding protein. In the present study we have cloned mouse and rat liver LRAT cDNA and tested the hypothesis that LRAT mRNA, like LRAT activity, is regulated physiologically in a liver-specific manner. The nucleotide sequences of mouse and rat liver LRAT cDNA each encode a 231-amino acid protein with 94% similarity between these species, and approximately 80% similarity to a cDNA for LRAT from human retinal pigment epithelium. Expression of rat LRAT cDNA in HEK293T cells resulted in functional retinol esterification and storage. RNA from several rat tissues hybridized with liver LRAT cDNA. However, LRAT mRNA was virtually absent from the liver of vitamin A-deficient animals, while being unaffected in intestine and testis. LRAT mRNA was rapidly induced by retinoic acid (RA) in liver of vitamin A-deficient mice and rats (P < 0.01). LRAT mRNA and enzymatic activity were well correlated in the same livers of rats treated with exogenous RA (r = 0.895, P < 0.0001), and in a dietary study that encompassed a broad range of vitamin A exposure (r = 0.799, P < 0.0001). Liver total retinol of <100 nmol/g was associated with low LRAT expression (<33% of control). We propose that RA, derived exogenously or from metabolism, serves as an important signal of vitamin A status. The constitutive expression of liver LRAT during retinoid sufficiency would serve to divert retinol into storage pools, while the curtailment of LRAT expression in retinoid deficiency would maintain retinol for secretion and delivery to peripheral tissues.

Highlights

  • Lecithin:retinol acyltransferase (LRAT), present in microsomes, catalyzes the transfer of the sn-1 fatty acid of phosphatidylcholine to retinol bound to a cellular retinolbinding protein

  • Cloning of mouse and rat liver LRAT cDNA Using a pair of primers designed from mouse EST sequences, the 5Ј and 3Ј regions of LRAT cDNA were cloned by RACE from both mouse and rat liver

  • The nucleotide sequences of both mouse and rat liver LRAT cDNA predicted a single open reading frame encoding a protein with a molecular mass of 25.8 kDa and a pI of about 8.86 for mouse and 8.13 for rat (Fig. 1A)

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Summary

Introduction

Lecithin:retinol acyltransferase (LRAT), present in microsomes, catalyzes the transfer of the sn-1 fatty acid of phosphatidylcholine to retinol bound to a cellular retinolbinding protein. LRAT mRNA was rapidly induced by retinoic acid (RA) in liver of vitamin A-deficient mice and rats (P Ͻ 0.01). Lecithin:retinol acyltransferase from mouse and rat liver: cDNA cloning and liver-specific regulation by dietary vitamin A and retinoic acid. RA exerts the broad pleiotropic activities attributed to vitamin A by binding to two families of retinoid-activated nuclear receptors, RAR and RXR, which are expressed widely in tissue-specific patterns [see [9] for review]. These receptors bind to cognate response elements in the regulatory region of numerous genes that code for structurally and functionally diverse proteins.

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