Foam cells in explants of atherosclerotic rabbit aortas have receptors for beta-very low density lipoproteins and modified low density lipoproteins.
- 1 January 1983
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Arteriosclerosis: An Official Journal of the American Heart Association, Inc.
- Vol. 3 (1) , 2-12
- https://doi.org/10.1161/01.atv.3.1.2
Abstract
Beta-migrating very low density lipoproteins (beta--VLDL) and chemically modified low density lipoproteins (LDL), labeled with the fluorescent probe 3,3'-dioctadecylindocarbocyanine (Dil), were used to determine whether foam cells from atherosclerotic lesions have lipoprotein receptors similar to those of macrophages. The advantage of the Dil probe is that it produces a brilliant fluorescence due to its retention by the cells. When cells grown from intimal-medial explants of atherosclerotic rabbit aortas were incubated with Dil-labeled beta-VLDL, both smooth muscle cells and foam cells became fluorescent. However, when large amounts of unlabeled LDL were added to compete with the beta-VLDL for binding to the LDL receptors, Dil-labeled beta-VLDL binding to smooth muscle cells was blocked, and only the foam cells became highly fluorescent, due to the presence of specific receptors for beta-VLDL on those cells. The foam cells in the explants also became fluorescent when incubated with Dil-labeled acetoacetylated (AcAc) LDL. The same fluorescently labeled foam cells avidly bound IgG-coated erythrocytes. It was possible to inhibit the binding of the Dil-labeled AcAc LDL to aortic foam cells by the addition of fucoidin, a known inhibitor of modified LDL binding to macrophages. Foam cells that became fluorescent were similar to cells grown from the explants that contained an abundance of Oil red O positive lipid droplets and demonstrated high acid lipase activity. These results suggest that macrophages were the precursors of the foam cells derived from explants of atherosclerotic rabbit aortas. One difference we noted between these foam cells and macrophages, however, was that foam cells from the explants retained their cholesteryl esters under the same culture conditions that resulted in the loss of lipid from macrophages loaded with lipoproteins in vitro. The existence of receptors for beta-VLDL on aortic foam cells supports the contention that dietary cholesterol-induced beta-VLDL may be atherogenic lipoproteins in vivo.This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- Modulating effects of canine high density lipoproteins on cholesteryl ester synthesis induced by beta-very low density lipoproteins in macrophages. Possible in vitro correlates with atherosclerosis.Arteriosclerosis: An Official Journal of the American Heart Association, Inc., 1982
- Acetoacetylated lipoproteins used to distinguish fibroblasts from macrophages in vitro by fluorescence microscopy.Arteriosclerosis: An Official Journal of the American Heart Association, Inc., 1981
- [11] Flame ionization detection applied to thin-layer chromatography on coated quartz rodsPublished by Elsevier ,1981
- Biological labeling of very low density lipoproteins with cholesteryl linoleyl ether and its fate in the intact ratBiochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Lipids and Lipid Metabolism, 1980
- The scavenger cell pathway for lipoprotein degradation: Specificity of the binding site that mediates the uptake of negatively‐charged LDL by macrophagesJournal of Supramolecular Structure, 1980
- Altered Metabolism (In Vivo and In Vitro) of Plasma Lipoproteins after Selective Chemical Modification of Lysine Residues of the ApoproteinsJournal of Clinical Investigation, 1979
- Enhanced binding by cultured human fibroblasts of apo-E-containing lipoproteins as compared with low density lipoproteinsBiochemistry, 1978
- A new approach for assessing cumulative lysosomal degradation of proteins or other macromoleculesBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1978
- Ultrastructural and immunohistochemical studies of primary cultures of aortic medial cellsExperimental and Molecular Pathology, 1973
- The metabolism of very low density lipoprotein proteins I. Preliminary in vitro and in vivo observationsBiochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Lipids and Lipid Metabolism, 1972