Tissue-specific inhibition of apolipoprotein B mRNA editing in the liver by adenovirus-mediated transfer of a dominant negative mutant APOBEC-1 leads to increased low density lipoprotein in mice

التفاصيل البيبلوغرافية
العنوان: Tissue-specific inhibition of apolipoprotein B mRNA editing in the liver by adenovirus-mediated transfer of a dominant negative mutant APOBEC-1 leads to increased low density lipoprotein in mice
المؤلفون: Julie Martinez, Merry Sullivan, Kunihisa Kobayashi, Ba-Bie Teng, Kazuhiro Oka, Kazumi Ishimura-Oka, Lawrence Chan
المصدر: The Journal of biological chemistry. 272(3)
سنة النشر: 1997
مصطلحات موضوعية: Enzyme complex, Apolipoprotein B, APOBEC-1 Deaminase, Mutant, Biology, Biochemistry, Adenoviridae, chemistry.chemical_compound, Mice, In vivo, Cytidine Deaminase, Animals, Humans, Luciferase, RNA, Messenger, Molecular Biology, Apolipoproteins B, Gene Transfer Techniques, Fast protein liquid chromatography, Cell Biology, Molecular biology, Lipoproteins, LDL, chemistry, Liver, RNA editing, Low-density lipoprotein, Mutation, biology.protein, Mutagenesis, Site-Directed, RNA Editing
الوصف: APOBEC-1 is a catalytic subunit of an apolipoprotein B (apoB) mRNA editing enzyme complex. In humans it is expressed only in the intestine, whereas in mice it is expressed in both the liver and intestine. APOBEC-1 exists as a spontaneous homodimer (Lau, P. P., Zhu, H.-J., Baldini, A., Charnsangavej, C., and Chan, L. (1994) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 91, 8522-8526). We tested the editing activity and dimerization potential of three different mouse APOBEC-1 mutants using in vitro editing activity assay and immunoprecipitation in the presence of epitope-tagged APOBEC-1. One catalytically inactive mutant, mu1 (H61K/C93S/C96S), that retains its capacity to dimerize with wild-type APOBEC-1 was found to inhibit the editing activity of the latter and was thus a dominant negative mutant. Two other inactive mutants that dimerized poorly with APOBEC-1 failed to inhibit its activity. Intravenous injection of a mu1 adenovirus, Admu1, in C57BL/6J mice in vivo resulted in liver-specific expression of mu1 mRNA. On days 4 and 9 after virus injection, endogenous hepatic apoB mRNA editing was 23.3 +/- 5.0 and 36.8 +/- 5.7%, respectively, compared with 65.3 +/- 11 and 71.3 +/- 5.2%, respectively, for luciferase adenovirus-treated animals. Plasma apoB-100 accounted for 95 and 93% of total plasma apoB in Admu1 animals on days 4 and 9, respectively, compared with 78 and 72% in luciferase adenovirus animals. Plasma cholesterol on day 9 was 98 +/- 17 mg/dl in the mu1-treated animals, substantially higher than phosphate-buffered saline-treated (57 +/- 9 mg/dl) or luciferase-treated (71 +/- 12 mg/dl) controls. Fast protein liquid chromatography analysis of mouse plasma showed that the intermediate density/low density lipoprotein fractions in the animals treated with the dominant negative mutant adenovirus were much higher than those in controls. We conclude that active APOBEC-1 functions as a dimer and its activity is inhibited by a dominant negative mutant. Furthermore, apoB mRNA editing determines the availability of apoB-100, which in turn limits the amount of intermediate density/low density lipoprotein that can be formed in mice. Liver-specific inhibition of apoB mRNA editing is an important component of any strategy to enhance the value of mice as a model for human lipoprotein metabolism.
تدمد: 0021-9258
الوصول الحر: https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::3dc6f958e29e25e6d07e42e2a7e67bbbTest
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/8999814Test
حقوق: OPEN
رقم الانضمام: edsair.doi.dedup.....3dc6f958e29e25e6d07e42e2a7e67bbb
قاعدة البيانات: OpenAIRE