Abstract

Tissue needs for retinoids are believed to be satisfied through the delivery in the circulation of retinol by its specific plasma transport protein, retinol-binding protein (RBP), which circulates as a 1-to-1 protein complex with transthyretin (TTR). The binding of RBP to TTR is thought to prevent filtration of retinol-RBP in the kidney and to play a role in secretion of RBP from hepatocytes. Recently a strain of mice (TTR-) that totally lacks immunoreactive TTR was produced by targeted mutagenesis. We have explored the effects of TTR deficiency on retinol and RBP metabolism in this mutant strain. In pooled plasma from the TTR- mice retinol levels averaged 6% of those of wild type animals. Similarly, plasma RBP in the TTR- mice was found to be 5% of wild type levels. Hepatic retinol and retinyl ester levels were similar for mutant and wild type mice, suggesting that the mutation affects neither the uptake nor storage of dietary retinol. Levels of retinol and retinyl esters in testis, kidney, spleen, and eye cups from TTR- mice were normal. Plasma all-trans-retinoic acid levels for the TTR- mice were 2.3-fold higher than those of wild type (425 versus 190 ng/dl). Kidney RBP levels were similar for the mutant and wild type mice and we were unable to detect intact RBP in urine from TTR- mice. Hepatic RBP levels in the TTR- mice were 60% higher than those of wild type mice (39.8 versus 25.0 micrograms of RBP/g of tissue). These data may suggest that there is a partial blockage in RBP secretion from TTR- hepatocytes that leads to lessened plasma levels of retinol-RBP.

Highlights

  • From the tInstitute of Human Nutrition, Columbia University, New York, New York 10032; §Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Genetics, St

  • Tissue needs for retinoids are believed to be satisfied through the delivery in the circulation of retinol by its specific plasma transport protein, retinol-binding protein (RBP), which circulates as a J-to-I protein complex with transthyretin (TTR)

  • We have explored the effects of TTR deficiency on retinol and RBP metabolism in this mutant strain

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Summary

THE JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY

Vol 270, No., Issue of January 13, pp. 866-870, 1995 Printed in U.S.A. Studies on the Metabolism of Retinol and Retinol-binding Protein in Transthyretin-deficient Mice Produced by Homologous Recombination*. Plasma all-trans-retinoic acid levels for the TTR- mice were 2.3-fold higher than those of wild type (425 versus 190 ng/dl). RBP is the sole plasma transport protein for retinol from hepatic storage depots to peripheral target tissues for retinoid action. Such low plasma levels of retinol and RBP are observed in vitamin A deficiency, in animals which show the clinical symptoms of deficiency and which are within 1-2 weeks of death [1,34] This would suggest that either our understanding of retinoid transport and metabolism is not complete or that the physiology of the TTR- mice has in some way compensated for the steady delivery of low levels of retinol. Our studies reported in this manuscript provide a first full characterization of retinoid transport and metabolism in the unique TTR- strain of mice

MATERIALS AND METHODS
RESULTS
RBP n
Retinyl esterb
DI SCUSSION
Full Text
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