Abstract

Acyl-coenzyme A:cholesterol acyltransferase (ACAT) catalyzes the esterification of cholesterol with long chain fatty acids and is believed to play an important part in the development of atherosclerotic lesions. To facilitate the study of ACAT's role in this process, we have used the human ACAT K1 clone previously described (Chang, C. C. Y., Huh, H. Y., Cadigan, K. M. and Chang, T. Y. (1993) J. Biol. Chem. 268, 20747-20755) to isolate mouse ACAT cDNA from a liver cDNA library. The 3.7-kilobase cDNA clone isolated contains a 1620-base pair open reading frame which encodes a protein of 540 amino acids. The predicted mouse ACAT protein is 87% identical to the protein product of human ACAT K1 and shares many of the same secondary structural features, including two transmembrane domains, a leucine heptad motif consistent with dimer or multimer formation, and five regions homologous to the "signature sequences" found in other enzymes that catalyze acyl adenylation followed by acyl thioester formation and acyl transfer. Using the cDNA as a hybridization probe, we mapped the gene encoding mouse ACAT to chromosome 1 in a region syntenic to human chromosome 1 where the ACAT gene is located. Northern blot analysis and RNase protection assays of mouse tissues revealed that ACAT mRNA is expressed most highly in the adrenal gland, ovary, and preputial gland and is least abundant in skeletal muscle, adipose tissue, heart, and brain. To study the dietary regulation of ACAT mRNA expression in mouse tissues, we fed C57BL/6J mice a high-fat, high-cholesterol (HF/HC) atherogenic diet for 3 weeks and measured ACAT mRNA levels in various tissues by RNase protection. The HF/HC diet had little effect on ACAT mRNA levels in the small intestine, aorta, adrenal, or peritoneal macrophages, whereas hepatic ACAT mRNA levels were doubled in mice fed the atherogenic diet. ACAT activity in liver microsomes was similarly increased in cholesterol-fed mice, suggesting that mouse ACAT is regulated at least in part at the level of mRNA abundance. Additionally, a significant positive correlation was observed between ACAT activity and microsomal free cholesterol levels in chow- and cholesterol-fed mice, supporting the concept of cholesterol availability as a regulator of ACAT. To further investigate the regulation of ACAT activity under controlled conditions, ACAT-deficient Chinese hamster ovary cells were stably transfected with the mouse ACAT cDNA clone driven by a cytomegalovirus promoter. Two transfected Chinese hamster ovary cell lines that expressed the mouse ACAT transgene regained the ability to esterify cholesterol.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

Highlights

  • Acyl-coenzyme A:cholesterol acyltransferase (ACAT) catalyzes the esterification of cholesterol with long chain fatty acids and is believed to play an important part in the development of atherosclerotic lesions

  • In the classic model for tissue cholesterol homeostasis, the cultured fibroblast, ACAT activity is up-regulated by low density lipoprotein (LDL), exogenous free cholesterol, and oxygenated sterols such as 25-hydroxycholesterol; as the level of free cholesterol substrate in the cell increases, ACAT activity coordinately increases to maintain the level of free cholesterol within the cell in a fairly narrow range [2]

  • Effect of an Atherogenic Diet upon Hepatic and Intestinal ACAT mRNA Expression—To determine whether ACAT mRNA levels are regulated by cholesterol feeding, ACAT mRNA in liver, small intestine, and adrenal tissue from chowand cholesterol-fed C57BL/6J mice was quantitated by an RNase protection assay

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Summary

EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES

Materials—Fatty acid-free bovine serum albumin, bovine serum albumin standard solution, oleoyl-coenzyme A, cholesteryl oleate, oleic acid, 25-hydroxycholesterol, human low density lipoprotein, phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, and total cholesterol (#352) and triglyceride INT (#336) assay kits were all obtained from Sigma. Cloning of Mouse ACAT—The human ACAT cDNA clone K1 previously described [3] was digested with SalI and HindIII to yield a fragment of 1.7 kb containing the entire coding region of human ACAT. (C57BL/6J X SPRET/Ei)F1 X SPRET/Ei backcrossed mice were obtained from the Jackson Laboratory Backcross Panel Service (Bar Harbor, ME) [8] To probe these blots for ACAT, the mouse ACAT cDNA clone described above was digested with EcoRI and SstII to yield a 1.6-kb fragment containing virtually all of the coding region. This fragment was labeled with [␣-32P]dCTP by random priming and incubated with the blots overnight at 65 °C according to the protocol recommended by the Jackson Laboratory.

Cloning and Regulation of Mouse ACAT
RESULTS
NSd NSd
DISCUSSION
Cell line
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