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Pussinen, PJ; Karten, B; Wintersperger, A; Reicher, H; McLean, M; Malle, E; Sattler, W.
The human breast carcinoma cell line HBL-100 acquires exogenous cholesterol from high-density lipoprotein via CLA-1 (CD-36 and LIMPII analogous 1)-mediated selective cholesteryl ester uptake.
BIOCHEM J 2000 349: 559-566. Doi: 10.1042%2F0264-6021%3A3490559 [OPEN ACCESS]
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Leading authors Med Uni Graz
Sattler Wolfgang
Co-authors Med Uni Graz
Hinteregger Helga
Malle Ernst
Wintersperger Andrea
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Abstract:
Aberrant cell proliferation is one of the hallmarks of carcinogenesis, and cholesterol is thought to play an important role during cell proliferation and cancer progression. In the present study we examined the pathways that could contribute to enhanced proliferation rates of HBL-100 cells in the presence of apolipoprotein E-depleted high-density lipoprotein subclass 3 (HDL(3)). When HBL-100 cells were cultivated in the presence of HDL(3) (up to 200 microg/ml HDL(3) protein), the growth rates and cellular cholesterol content were directly related to the concentrations of HDL(3) in the culture medium. In principle, two pathways can contribute to cholesterol/cholesteryl ester (CE) uptake from HDL(3), (i) holoparticle- and (ii) scavenger-receptor BI (SR-BI)-mediated selective uptake of HDL(3)-associated CEs. Northern- and Western-blot analyses revealed the expression of CLA-1 (CD-36 and LIMPII analogous 1), the human homologue of the rodent HDL receptor SR-BI. In line with CLA-1 expression, selective uptake of HDL(3)-CEs exceeded HDL(3)-holoparticle uptake between 12- and 58-fold. Competition experiments demonstrated that CLA-1 ligands (oxidized HDL, oxidized and acetylated low-density lipoprotein and phosphatidylserine) inhibited selective HDL(3)-CE uptake. In line with the ligand-binding specificity of CLA-1, phosphatidylcholine did not compete for selective HDL(3)-CE uptake. Selective uptake was regulated by the availability of exogenous cholesterol and PMA, but not by adrenocorticotropic hormone. HPLC analysis revealed that a substantial part of HDL(3)-CE, which was taken up selectively, was subjected to intracellular hydrolysis. A potential candidate facilitating extralysosomal hydrolysis of HDL(3)-CE is hormone-sensitive lipase, an enzyme which was identified in HBL-100 cells by Western blots. Our findings demonstrate that HBL-100 cells are able to acquire HDL-CEs via selective uptake. Subsequent partial hydrolysis by hormone-sensitive lipase could provide 'free' cholesterol that is available for the synthesis of cellular membranes during proliferation of cancer cells.
Find related publications in this database (using NLM MeSH Indexing)
Antigens, CD36 - metabolism
Biological Transport - metabolism
Blotting, Northern - metabolism
Blotting, Western - metabolism
Breast Neoplasms - metabolism
Cell Division - physiology
Cholesterol - metabolism
Cholesterol Esterase - metabolism
Cholesterol Esters - metabolism
Cholesterol, HDL - metabolism
Humans - metabolism
Hydrolysis - metabolism
Lipoproteins, HDL - metabolism
Receptors, Immunologic - metabolism
Receptors, Lipoprotein - metabolism
Receptors, Scavenger - metabolism
Scavenger Receptors, Class B - metabolism
Tumor Cells, Cultured - metabolism

Find related publications in this database (Keywords)
cancer cell
cell growth
human scavenger receptor class B type I
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