Proteolysis and Fusion of Low Density Lipoprotein Particles Strengthen Their Binding to Human Aortic Proteoglycans (*)
- From the (1) Wihuri Research Institute, Kalliolinnantie 4, FIN-00140 Helsinki
- State Technical Research Center of Finland, Chemical Technology, FIN-02044 Espoo, Finland
- §To whom correspondence should be addressed.
Abstract
Lipid droplets resembling those seen in the extracellular space of the arterial intima were generated in vitro when granule proteases of rat serosal mast cells degraded the apolipoprotein B-100 (apoB-100) component of granule-bound
low density lipoprotein (LDL), and the particles fused on the granule surface (Paananen, K., and Kovanen, P. T.(1994) J. Biol. Chem. 269, 2023-2031). Moreover, the binding of the fused particles to the heparin proteoglycan component of the granules was found
to be strengthened. We have now treated LDL particles with α-chymotrypsin and examined the strength with which the proteolytically
modified LDL binds to human aortic proteoglycans on an affinity column. We found that chymotryptic degradation of the LDL
particles triggered particle fusion. The higher the degree of proteolytic degradation, the higher were the degree of fusion
and the strength of binding to the aortic proteoglycans. Separation of the proteolyzed particles by size exclusion chromatography
into two fractions, unfused and fused particles, and analysis of their binding strengths revealed that not only the fused
but also the unfused proteolyzed particles bound more tightly to the proteoglycans than did the native LDL particles. To investigate
the mechanism underlying this increase in binding strength, we attached [
C]dimethyl groups to the lysines and used NMR spectroscopy to quantify the active lysine residues of apoB-100, which are thought
to be located in basic areas of apoB-100 and involved in binding of LDL to proteoglycans. Analysis of the
C-labeled particles showed that, despite loss of apoB-100 fragments from the particles, the number of active lysine residues
in the unfused proteolyzed particles had not decreased. In the fused proteolyzed particles, the number of active lysine residues
was markedly increased. Thus, proteolytic fusion appears to increase the number of basic domains of apoB-100, which would
explain the observed increase in the strength of binding of the modified LDL particles to arterial proteoglycans. Since the
fused particles resemble the small lipid droplets found in the atherosclerotic arterial intima, this LDL modification offers
a plausible mechanism for the focal accumulation of lipid droplets in the extracellular proteoglycan matrix during atherogenesis.
Footnotes
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↵* This work was supported in part by the Academy of Finland and Magnus Ehrnrooth Foundation. The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. This article must therefore by hereby marked “advertisement” in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
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↵1 The abbreviations used are:
- LDL
-
low density lipoprotein
- apo
-
apolipoprotein
- HPLC
-
high performance liquid chromatography
- dpm
-
disintegrations/min
- ppm
-
parts/million.
- © 1995 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.











