Abstract

AbstractCholesteryl esters (CEs) are the water-insoluble transport and storage form of cholesterol. Steroidogenic cells primarily store CEs in cytoplasmic lipid droplet (LD) organelles, as contrasted to the majority of mammalian cell types that predominantly store triacylglycerol (TAG) in LDs. The LD-binding Plin2 binds to both CE- and TAG-rich LDs, and although Plin2 is known to regulate degradation of TAG-rich LDs, its role for regulation of CE-rich LDs is unclear. To investigate the role of Plin2 in the regulation of CE-rich LDs, we performed histological and molecular characterization of adrenal glands from Plin2+/+ and Plin2−/− mice. Adrenal glands of Plin2−/− mice had significantly enlarged organ size, increased size and numbers of CE-rich LDs in cortical cells, elevated cellular unesterified cholesterol levels, and increased expression of macrophage markers and genes facilitating reverse cholesterol transport. Despite altered LD storage, mobilization of adrenal LDs and secretion of corticosterone induced by adrenocorticotropic hormone stimulation or starvation were similar in Plin2+/+ and Plin2−/− mice. Plin2−/− adrenals accumulated ceroid-like structures rich in multilamellar bodies in the adrenal cortex-medulla boundary, which increased with age, particularly in females. Finally, Plin2−/− mice displayed unexpectedly high levels of phosphatidylglycerols, which directly paralleled the accumulation of these ceroid-like structures. Our findings demonstrate an important role of Plin2 for regulation of CE-rich LDs and cellular cholesterol balance in the adrenal cortex.

Highlights

  • Further examinations of the adrenals confirmed that the adrenals were enlarged in age-matched 30-week-old female Plin2−/− mice compared with Plin2+/+ mice (Fig. 1A)

  • Steroidogenic adrenal cortical cells are exceptions where lipid droplet (LD) are almost exclusively filled with Cholesteryl esters (CEs)

  • Both classes of LDs are coated with Plin proteins, with Plin1-3 being detected in adrenals [22, 23, 53]

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Summary

Introduction

To quantify the levels of CE and unesterified cholesterol in cortical cells, lipids extracted from the whole adrenal of 15-week-old males were normalized against protein content and separated with TLC (Fig. 2B). Accumulation of CE in Plin2−/− adrenal cortical cells may occur owing to altered Plin coating on the LD surface, with potential effects on lipolytic rates and intracellular levels of lipid species activating transcriptional signaling [32].

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