Abstract

We investigated effects of pro-atherogenic oxidized lipoproteins on phosphatidylcholine (PtdCho) biosynthesis in murine lung epithelial cells (MLE-12). Cells surface-bound, internalized, and degraded oxidized low density lipoproteins (Ox-LDL). Ox-LDL significantly reduced [3H]choline incorporation into PtdCho in cells by selectively inhibiting the activity of the rate-regulatory enzyme, CTP:phosphocholine cytdylyltransferase (CCT). Ox-LDL coordinately increased the cellular turnover of CCTalpha protein as determined by [35S]methionine pulse-chase studies by inducing the calcium-activated proteinase, calpain. Forced expression of calpain or exposure of cells to the calcium ionophore, A23187, increased CCTalpha degradation, whereas overexpression of the endogenous calpain inhibitor, calpastatin, attenuated Ox-LDL-induced CCTalpha degradation. The effects of Ox-LDL on CCTalpha breakdown were attenuated in calpain-deficient cells. In vitro calpain digestion of CCTalpha isolated from cells transfected with truncated or internal deletion mutants indicated multiple cleavage sites within the CCTalpha primary structure, leading to the generation of a 26-kDa (p26) fragment. Calpain hydrolysis of purified CCTalpha generated p26, which upon NH2-terminal sequencing localized a calpain attack site within the CCTalpha amino terminus. Expression of a CCTalpha mutant where the amino-terminal cleavage site and a putative carboxyl-terminal hydrolysis region were modified resulted in an enzyme that was significantly less sensitive to proteolytic cleavage and restored the ability of cells to synthesize surfactant PtdCho after Ox-LDL treatment. Thus, these results provide a critical link between proatherogenic lipoproteins and their metabolic target, CCTalpha, resulting in impaired surfactant metabolism.

Highlights

  • From the Departments of ‡Internal Medicine and ¶Biochemistry and §Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center, The University of Iowa College of Medicine, Iowa City, Iowa 52242

  • Cells exhibited a dose-dependent increase in catabolism of Ox-Very low density lipoproteins (VLDL); saturability was not always observed within the range of lipoproteins tested in these studies (Fig. 1, insets)

  • Evidence supporting a role for calpain degradation of CTP:phosphocholine cytdylyltransferase (CCT)␣ includes: (i) oxidized Low density lipoproteins (LDL) stimulate calpain expression in alveolar cells resulting in increased CCT␣ turnover; (ii) the effects of oxidized LDL on CCT␣ degradation are reproduced by forced expression of calpain or exposure of cells to calcium ionophore; (iii) overexpression of calpastatin attenuates oxidized LDL degradation of CCT␣; (iv) the effects of these modified lipoproteins on CCT␣ breakdown are reduced in calpaindeficient cells; and (v) purified calpain hydrolyzes recombinant CCT␣ at the amino terminus and, most likely, near the catalytic membrane hinge region, generating a prominent 26-kDa fragment

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Summary

THE JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY

Vol 278, No 39, Issue of September 26, pp. 37032–37040, 2003 Printed in U.S.A. Oxidized Lipoproteins Inhibit Surfactant Phosphatidylcholine Synthesis via Calpain-mediated Cleavage of CTP:Phosphocholine Cytidylyltransferase*. Expression of a CCT␣ mutant where the amino-terminal cleavage site and a putative carboxyl-terminal hydrolysis region were modified resulted in an enzyme that was significantly less sensitive to proteolytic cleavage and restored the ability of cells to synthesize surfactant PtdCho after Ox-LDL treatment. These observations led us to hypothesize that Ox-LDL catabolism by alveolar epithelia might down-regulate surfactant DSPtdCho biosynthesis To test this hypothesis, we determined the effects of oxidized lipoproteins on a key regulatory step within the CDP-choline pathway. We determined the effects of oxidized lipoproteins on a key regulatory step within the CDP-choline pathway We observed that these modified lipoproteins inhibit PtdCho synthesis in alveolar epithelia by triggering CCT␣ degradation via calpain-mediated cleavage of the enzyme

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