We previously demonstrated that apolipoprotein A-I (apoA-I), the major protein component of high-density lipoprotein (HDL), is an important target for myeloperoxidase (MPO)-catalyzed tyrosine chlorination in the circulation of subjects with cardiovascular diseases. Oxidation of apoA-I by MPO has been reported to deprive HDL of its protective properties. However, the potential effects of MPO-mediated site-specific tyrosine chlorination of apoA-I on dysfunctional HDL formation and atherosclerosis was unclear. Herein, Tyr192 in apoA-I was found to be the major chlorination site in both lesion and plasma HDL from humans with atherosclerosis, while MPO binding to apoA-I was demonstrated by immunoprecipitation studies in vivo. In vitro, MPO-mediated damage of lipid-free apoA-I impaired its ability to promote cellular cholesterol efflux by the ABCA1 pathway, whereas oxidation to lipid-associated apoA-I inhibited lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase activation, two key steps in reverse cholesterol transport. Compared with native apoA-I, apoA-I containing a Tyr192 → Phe mutation was moderately resistant to oxidative inactivation by MPO. In high-fat-diet-fed apolipoprotein E-deficient mice, compared with native apoA-I, subcutaneous injection with oxidized apoA-I (MPO treated) failed to mediate the lipid content in aortic plaques while mutant apoA-I (Tyr192 → Phe) showed a slightly stronger ability to reduce the lipid content in vivo. Our observations suggest that oxidative damage of apoA-I and HDL involves MPO-dependent site-specific tyrosine chlorination, raising the feasibility of producing MPO-resistant forms of apoA-I that have stronger antiatherosclerotic activity in vivo.
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