Chemistry: natural resins or derivatives; peptides or proteins; – Proteins – i.e. – more than 100 amino acid residues
Reexamination Certificate
2000-05-31
2004-05-25
Eyler, Yvonne (Department: 1646)
Chemistry: natural resins or derivatives; peptides or proteins;
Proteins, i.e., more than 100 amino acid residues
C530S300000, C536S023500, C436S501000, C435S006120, C435S007200, C435S007210, C435S069500, C435S252300, C435S320100, C514S002600
Reexamination Certificate
active
06740735
ABSTRACT:
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates generally to the fields of molecular biology, cardiovascular medicine and cellular nutrition. More specifically, the present invention relates to DNA encoding the human monocyte-macrophage and placental triglyceride-rich lipoprotein/apolipoprotein B (apoB) receptor gene(s) and protein(s).
2. Description of the Related Art
Hypertriglyceridemia is a common, heterogeneous disorder. When chylomicrons persist in the fasting state, lipid-filled monocyte-macrophage-derived foam cells can accumulate in the spleen, liver, bone marrow, atherosclerotic lesions, and skin (Fredrickson, 1978). Many, but not all, early studies (Carlson, 1972; Brunzell, 1976; Grundy, 1988; Schaefer, 1988; Austin, 1991) indicate elevated plasma triglycerides are a risk factor for coronary heart disease and myocardial infarction, sequelae of atherosclerosis. The possibility that triglyceride-rich lipoproteins (hepatic as well as dietary) are involved in atherosclerosis has been strengthened recently. Both the Procam study and a follow-up of the Helsinki Heart Study implicate elevated triglycerides (and therefore triglyceride-rich lipoproteins) as an important risk factor in atherosclerosis (Assmann, 1992). Havel et al. demonstrated that plasma very low density lipoprotein and intermediate density lipoprotein cholesterol levels correlated with progression of coronary atherosclerosis disease, whereas low density lipoprotein cholesterol level did not (Phillips, 1993). Moreover, very low density lipoprotein-intermediate density lipoprotein particles enter the artery wall and are found in human atherosclerotic plaques (Rapp, 1994). Elevated postprandial chylomicron remnants of S
f
<400 are significantly higher in subjects with coronary heart disease but with normal fasting lipid levels than in matched control subjects without this disease (Patsch, 1992; Weintraub, 1996). Thus, there is increasing biochemical as well as epidemiologic evidence that the major carriers of plasma triglycerides, very low density lipoproteins and plasma chylomicrons and their remnants, are atherogenic.
Monocytes and macrophages play a key role in atherogenesis, accounting for many lipid-filled “foam cells” in atherosclerotic lesions (Gerrity, 1981; Faggiotto, 1984). Many studies on foam cell formation have focused on uptake of modified and oxidized low density lipoprotein by the macrophage scavenger receptor and putative oxidized low density lipoprotein receptors (van Berkel, 1994). However, monocytes and macrophages also take up intestinally-derived plasma chylomicrons, which contain apoB48, and hepatically-derived very low density lipoprotein (apoB-100). Zilversmit and colleagues demonstrated extrahepatic uptake of ~40% of chylomicrons in rabbits (Ross, 1977) that was decreased by inhibition of the reticuloendothelial system (Nagata, 1987). Furthermore, studies in marmosets (a primate) and rabbits demonstrated substantial uptake (20-40% of total) of chylomicrons in vivo by accessible, peripheral macrophages, particularly in bone marrow (both animals) and spleen (marmosets) (Hussain, 1989a, 1989b). This would suggest that triglyceride-rich lipoproteins serve as a non-modified, native source of lipid for monocytes' and macrophages' nutrition in the normal state.
Triglyceride-rich lipoproteins are involved in the pathological conversion of monocytes and macrophages into foam cells in humans, a process seen in bone marrow, spleen, etc. in types 1, 3 and 5 hypertriglyceridemia (Fredrickson, 1978). Triglyceride-rich lipoproteins are also involved in formation of monocyte-macrophage-derived foam cells in eruptive xanthomas in untreated hypertriglyceridemic diabetic subjects. These foam cells contained triglyceride-rich lipoprotein core lipids, triglycerides and cholesteryl esters, following chylomicron uptake (Parker, 1970).
Chylomicrons and hypertriglyceridemic-very low density lipoproteins (including &bgr;-very low density lipoproteins) are the only known native human lipoproteins, without modification, which directly cause rapid, receptor-mediated macrophage lipid accumulation in vitro, causing macrophages to resemble foam cells histologically (Gianturco, 1982b, 1986a, 1986b, 1988; Brown et al., 1983; Ostlund-Lindqvist, 1983; Bersot, 1986). The lipid that accumulates in macrophages after receptor-mediated uptake of a lipoprotein in vitro reflects the lipid composition of the lipoprotein (Gianturco, 1982b; Brown et al., 1983). Therefore, as seen in vivo, triglyceride is the predominant lipid which accumulates initially in macrophages exposed to hypertriglyceridemic-very low density lipoproteins or chylomicrons, but cholesterol and cholesteryl esters also accumulate even in short term incubations (Gianturco, 1986a). Triglyceride-rich lipoproteins enter the arterial wall in animals (Nordesgaard, 1994) and in man (Rapp, 1994). Since one triglyceride-rich lipoprotein S
f
>100 contains 5 times or more cholesterol and cholesteryl esters than one low density lipoprotein (Shen, 1978), each triglyceride-rich lipoprotein that enters a monocyte, macrophage or the arterial wall is equivalent to 5 or more low density lipoprotein particles in terms of cholesterol delivery.
A number of plausible mechanisms for the above-described observations exist, many involving apoE. Very low density lipoproteins from hypertriglyceridemic subjects were first shown to be abnormal and potentially atherogenic in studies which showed that very low density lipoproteins from hypertriglyceridemic, but not from normal subjects, deliver cholesterol to cultured fibroblasts via the low density lipoprotein receptor (Gianturco, 1978). The abnormality in hypertriglyceridemic-very low density lipoproteins is primarily in the S
f
>60 subfraction which, in contrast to normal very low density lipoproteins fraction S
f
>60, contains extra apoE of an accessible conformation that specifically binds to the low density lipoprotein receptor; apoB of S
f
>60 particles does not bind to the LDL receptor (Gianturco, 1982a, 1983; Bradley, 1984; Hui, 1984; Krul, 1985; Eisenberg 1988). ApoE also mediates triglyceride-rich lipoprotein binding to other widely-distributed receptors in the low density lipoprotein receptor gene family, such as the low density lipoprotein receptor-related protein/&agr;
2
-macroglobulin receptor (Beisiegel, 1989; Kowal, 1989) and a very low density lipoprotein receptor expressed primarily in heart, muscle, and adipose (Takahashi, 1992). One of these could account for apoE-mediated very low density lipoprotein uptake observed in monocytes and macrophages (Wang-Iverson, 1985).
In contrast, apoB mediates the binding of low density lipoprotein (Goldstein, 1977), intermediate density lipoproteins (S
f
12-20), and the predominant very low density lipoprotein in normal subjects, very low density lipoprotein
3
(S
f
20-60) (Bradley, 1984; Krul, 1985), the only very low density lipoprotein subclass from normal subjects that binds to the low density lipoprotein receptor of fibroblasts (Gianturco, 1980a, 1982a, Eisenberg, 1988) or of U937 monocytes (Sacks and Breslow, 1988). The domain of apoB that binds to the low density lipoprotein receptor is in the C-terminal portion not present in apoB-48 (Yang, 1986; Milne, 1989).
Lipolysis of normal very low density lipoprotein S
f
>60 permits binding of the lipolytic remnant to the low density lipoprotein receptor (Catapano, 1979; Schonfeld, 1979). Lipoprotein lipase secreted by macrophages (Khoo, 1981) hydrolyzes very low density lipoproteins and enhances its cellular uptake (Lindquist, 1983). This facilitation may occur through localization of triglyceride-rich lipoproteins to membrane heparin sulfate proteoglycan (Eisenberg, 1992) and/or through binding to low density lipoprotein receptor-related protein (Beisiegel, 1991).
The substantial and rapid uptake of triglyceride-rich chylomicrons in vivo by bone marrow and spleen macrophages in marmosets and rabbits was not accelerated by infusion of apoE (Hussain, 1989a). This is surpri
Bradley William A.
Gianturco Sandra H.
Adler Benjamin Aaron
Brannock Michael
Eyler Yvonne
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