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Results 451 - 500 of 976
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Zhou Li - - 2003
The objective of this study was to determine whether there was an age-dependent difference in promoting nuclear translocation of NF-kappa B and platelet derived growth factor expression in aortic endothelial cells between two groups of Wistar rats of 2 and 10 months in age, respectively, accompanied by hypercholesterolemia. The serum ...
Ito Toshimitsu - - 2003
Since ATP-binding cassette transporter A1 (ABCA1) was discovered as the cause of Tangier disease and familial high-density lipoprotein (HDL) deficiency, many investigators have been interested in the relationship between ABC transporters and the mechanism underlying abnormal lipid metabolism. ABCG1 is an ABC half transporter that facilitates efflux excess cholesterol from ...
Azhar Salman - - 2003
A constant supply of cholesterol is needed as a substrate for steroid hormone synthesis in steroidogenic tissues. Although there are three potential sources, which could contribute to the 'cholesterol pool', needed for steroidogenesis (i.e., de novo synthesis, hydrolysis of stored cholesteryl esters and exogenous lipoproteins), current evidence suggests that plasma ...
Ohm T G - - 2003
Niemann Pick C (NPC), a fatal autosomal-recessive neurovisceral lipid storage disorder, is a juvenile dementia with massive nerve-cell loss and cytoskeletal abnormalities in cerebral neurons. These abnormalities consist of tangles of tau protein, which is otherwise highly soluble and usually stabilizes the microtubules. Immunologically and ultrastructurally similar tangles are seen ...
Mikkola Tomi S - - 2003
The efflux of cholesterol from cells and its incorporation into HDL is believed to be the initial step in reverse cholesterol transport. This report addresses the question of whether there is a relationship between the ability of serum to promote efflux of cholesterol from cells in culture and the severity ...
Rader Daniel J - - 2003
Plasma levels of high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol and its major protein, apolipoprotein A-I, are inversely correlated with the incidence of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease. Low HDL cholesterol and apolipoprotein A-I levels often are found in association with other cardiovascular risk factors, including the metabolic syndrome, insulin resistance, and type 2 diabetes ...
Freeman Dale A - - 2003
Troglitazone treatment of MA-10 Leydig tumor cells resulted in cellular cholesteryl esters decreasing and cell free cholesterol increasing. This was not an effect unique to this chemical entity; rosiglitazone and pioglitazone caused these changes also. The excess free cholesterol was recovered largely in the cholesterol oxidase susceptible, plasma membrane cholesterol ...
Burns Mark - - 2003
Epidemiology, in vitro, and in vivo studies strongly implicate a role for cholesterol in the pathogenesis of Alzheimer's disease (AD). We have examined the impact of aberrant intracellular cholesterol transport on the processing of the amyloid precursor protein (APP) in a mouse model of Niemann-Pick type C (NPC) disease. In ...
Miquel J F - - 2003
BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Biliary lipid absorption by the gall bladder mucosa and the cholesterol content of the gall bladder wall appear to play a role in cholesterol gall stone formation. As the scavenger receptor class B type I (SR- BI) regulates cellular cholesterol uptake, we studied its expression in human ...
Srivastava Rai Ajit K - - 2003
The scavenger receptor class B type I (SR-BI), a receptor for high-density lipoproteins (HDL), facilitates cholesterol delivery to steroidogenic tissues, and brings excess body cholesterol to liver for excretion. Scavenger receptors are also involved in the internalization of aggregates of Alzheimer's disease (AD) amyloid beta-protein, and selective uptake of HDL-associated ...
Oettl Karl - - 2003
Recent data suggest that impaired mitochondrial activities in Zellweger fibroblasts are related to defective peroxisome biogenesis and vice versa. To investigate the contribution of functional mitochondria to cholesterol biosynthesis, radioactive precursor molecules that form acetyl-CoA via beta-oxidation-independent (pyruvate) or -dependent (palmitate and octanoate) pathways were used. Production of both 14C-labeled ...
Coppens Isabelle - - 2003
Host cell cholesterol is implicated in the entry and replication of an increasing number of intracellular microbial pathogens. Although uptake of viral particles via cholesterol-enriched caveolae is increasingly well described, the requirement of cholesterol for internalization of eukaryotic pathogens is poorly understood and is likely to be partly organism specific. ...
Iqbal Jahangir - - 2003
The present study provides a new understanding about the mechanisms involved in cholesterol absorption by the intestinal cells. Contrary to general belief, our data show that newly absorbed cholesterol is neither immediately available for secretion with apoB lipoproteins nor exclusively secreted as part of chylomicrons. Based on our data, cholesterol ...
Lee Jin - - 2003
Gallbladder epithelial cells (GBEC) are exposed to high and fluctuating concentrations of biliary cholesterol on their apical (AP) surface. GBEC absorb and efflux cholesterol, but the mechanisms of cholesterol uptake, intracellular trafficking, and efflux in these cells are not known. We previously reported that ATP binding cassette (ABC)A1 mediates basolateral ...
Ha Ji-Sook - - 2003
In the present study, we used the human EA.hy926 endothelial cell line as the model system to investigate the effect of human serum albumin (HSA) and its structural variants on cholesterol efflux. Initial studies showed that HSA promoted cholesterol efflux in a dose- and time-dependent manner, reaching a plateau at ...
Wang Nan - - 2003
ATP-binding cassette transporter A1 (ABCA1) plays a major role in cholesterol homeostasis and HDL metabolism. ABCA1 mediates cellular cholesterol and phospholipid efflux to lipid-poor apolipoproteins, and upregulation of ABCA1 activity is antiatherogenic. ApoA-I, the major apolipoprotein component of HDL, promotes ABCA1-mediated cholesterol and phospholipid efflux, probably by directly binding to ...
Connelly Margery A - - 2003
Scavenger receptor class B, type I (SR-BI) shows a variety of effects on cellular cholesterol metabolism, including increased selective uptake of high density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesteryl ester, stimulation of free cholesterol (FC) efflux from cells to HDL and phospholipid vesicles, and changes in the distribution of plasma membrane FC as ...
Frolov Andrey - - 2003
Mutations in the Niemann-Pick disease genes cause lysosomal cholesterol accumulation and impaired low density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol esterification. These findings have been attributed to a block in cholesterol movement from lysosomes to the site of the sterol regulatory machinery. In this study we show that Niemann-Pick type C1 (NPC1) and ...
Vaughan Ashley M - - 2003
ATP binding cassette transporter A1 (ABCA1) mediates the transport of phospholipids and cholesterol from cells to lipid-poor HDL apolipoproteins. Cholesterol loading of cells induces ABCA1, implicating cholesterol as its major physiologic substrate. It is believed, however, that ABCA1 is primarily a phospholipid transporter and that cholesterol efflux occurs by diffusion ...
Burgess Jim W - - 2003
Administration of phosphatidylinositol (PI) to New Zealand White rabbits increases HDL negative charge and stimulates reverse cholesterol transport. Intravenously administered PI (10 mg/kg) associated almost exclusively with the HDL fraction in rabbits. PI promoted an increase in the hepatic uptake of plasma free cholesterol (FC) and a 21-fold increase in ...
Michikawa Makoto - - 2003
Cholesterol is an essential component of membranes for maintaining their structure and functions. The discovery that possession of apolipoprotein E (apoE), allele epsilon4 is a strong risk factor for Alzheimer's disease (AD) leads us to focus on the role of cholesterol in the pathogenesis of AD. Accumulating epidemiological and biological ...
Brewer H Bryan HB - - 2003
Four adenosine triphosphate-binding cassette (ABC) transporters-ABCA1, ABCG1, ABCG5, and ABCG8-have been identified and shown to modulate cholesterol and lipoprotein metabolism. Recent analyses of ABCA1 indicate that upregulation of ABCA1 in the liver and macrophages of transgenic mice is associated with increased plasma high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol levels, increased net flux ...
Puglielli Luigi - - 2003
A hallmark of all forms of Alzheimer's disease (AD) is an abnormal accumulation of the beta-amyloid protein (Abeta) in specific brain regions. Both the generation and clearance of Abeta are regulated by cholesterol. Elevated cholesterol levels increase Abeta in cellular and most animals models of AD, and drugs that inhibit ...
Lusa Sari - - 2003
Previous work demonstrates that the biosynthetic precursor of cholesterol, desmosterol, is released from cells and that its efflux to high density lipoprotein or phosphatidylcholine vesicles is greater than that of newly synthesized cholesterol (Johnson, W. J., Fischer, R. T., Phillips, M. C., and Rothblat, G. H. (1995) J. Biol. Chem. ...
Puri Vishwajeet - - 2003
We showed previously that the intracellular transport of sphingolipids (SLs) is altered in SL storage disease fibroblasts, due in part to the secondary accumulation of free cholesterol. In the present study we examined the mechanism of cholesterol elevation in normal human skin fibroblasts induced by treatment with SLs. When cells ...
Marcil Michel - - 2003
BACKGROUND: Prospective studies have examined the relationship between coronary artery disease and low plasma levels of high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C). METHODS AND RESULTS: We investigated the causes of hypoalphalipoproteinemia (HypoA; HDL-C <5th percentile) in 64 subjects (12 women and 52 men). Apolipoprotein AI-mediated cellular cholesterol and phospholipid efflux were measured ...
Millatt Lesley J - - 2003
The liver X receptors (LXRalpha and LXRbeta) are nuclear receptor transcription factors that are activated by certain oxysterol derivatives of cholesterol. As such, LXR activity may be up-regulated by cellular lipid loading or dietary cholesterol intake. Intensive research interest in the LXRs has led to the identification of an expanding ...
Van Eck Miranda - - 2003
Scavenger receptor class B, type I (SRBI) is a key regulator of high density lipoprotein (HDL) metabolism. It facilitates the efflux of cholesterol from cells in peripheral tissues to HDL and mediates the selective uptake of cholesteryl esters from HDL in the liver. We investigated the effects of SRBI deficiency ...
Igbavboa Urule - - 2003
The Golgi complex plays an important role in cholesterol trafficking in cells, and amyloid beta-peptides (Abetas) alter cholesterol trafficking. The hypothesis was tested that fresh and aged Abeta-(1-42) would differentially modify Golgi cholesterol content in DINTC1 astrocytes and that the effects of Abeta-(1-42) would be associated with the region of ...
Michikawa Makoto - - 2003
The implication that cholesterol plays an essential role in the pathogenesis of Alzheimer's disease (AD) is based on the 1993 finding that the presence of apolipoprotein E (apoE) allele epsilon;4 is a strong risk factor for developing AD. Since apoE is a regulator of lipid metabolism, it is reasonable to ...
van Deurs Bo - - 2003
The function of caveolae is hotly debated. It now seems clear that caveolae are stable membrane domains that are kept in place by the actin cytoskeleton. However, this stability can be perturbed, leading to caveolar internalization. Caveolae are important in the regulation of various signaling processes, such as nitric oxide ...
Jerome W Gray - - 2003
Microscopy has played a critical role in first identifying and then defining the role of lysosomes in formation of atherosclerotic foam cells. We review the evidence implicating lysosomal lipid accumulation as a factor in the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis with reference to the role of microscopy. In addition, we explore mechanisms ...
Burns Mark P - - 2003
Recent evidence strongly suggests a role for cholesterol and apolipoprotein E in the etiology of Alzheimer's disease. We have demonstrated the co-localization of cholesterol and apolipoprotein E with beta-amyloid immunoreactivity and thioflavin S immunofluorescence in AD type plaques of a transgenic mouse model. Cholesterol and apolipoprotein E co-localized to the ...
Mulligan Jacob D - - 2003
The ATP-binding cassette transporter A1 (ABCA1) participates in the efflux of cholesterol from cells. It remains unclear whether ABCA1 functions to efflux cholesterol across the basolateral or apical membrane of the intestine. We used a chicken model of ABCA1 dysfunction, the Wisconsin hypoalpha mutant (WHAM) chicken, to address this issue. ...
Zha Xiaohui - - 2003
Apolipoprotein AI (apoAI)-mediated cholesterol efflux is a process by which cells export excess cellular cholesterol to apoAI to form high density lipoprotein. ATP-binding cassette protein A1 (ABCA1) has recently been identified as the key regulator of this process. The pathways of intracellular cholesterol transport during efflux are largely unknown nor ...
Yancey Patricia G - - 2003
The removal of excess free cholesterol from cells by HDL or its apolipoproteins is important for maintaining cellular cholesterol homeostasis. This process is most likely compromised in the atherosclerotic lesion because the development of atherosclerosis is associated with low HDL cholesterol. Multiple mechanisms for efflux of cell cholesterol exist. Efflux ...
Escher Genevieve - - 2003
Cholesterol efflux from CHOP cells transfected with sterol 27-hydroxylase (CYP27A1) was compared with non-transfected and mock-transfected cells. Transfection caused expression of CYP27A1, formation of 27-hydroxycholesterol, and inhibition of cholesterol biosynthesis. Transfection enhanced cholesterol efflux to apolipoprotein A-I or human plasma by 2-3-fold but did not affect the efflux in the ...
Castaing Madeleine - - 2003
Multidrug-resistance (MDR) in cancer cells is often associated with marked changes in the membrane cholesterol levels. To assess the cholesterol-dependence of MDR modulator efficiency in terms of the drug-membrane interactions, the ability of 5 MDR-modulators to induce the leakage of Sulphan blue through anionic liposomes was quantified at various mole ...
Llaverías Gemma - - 2003
Avasimibe is a novel orally bioavailable ACAT inhibitor, currently under clinical development (phase III trials). It was safe when administered to rats, dogs, and humans. In vitro studies in human macrophages demonstrated that avasimibe reduces foam cell formation not only by enhancing free cholesterol efflux, but also by inhibiting the ...
Vainio Saara - - 2003
Mammalian cells have evolved complex feedback mechanisms to ensure sufficient supply of cholesterol and to prevent its excessive accumulation. During the process of atherosclerosis, these homeostatic mechanisms fail in macrophages. Uncontrolled cholesterol deposition is promoted by scavenger functions of the macrophages and the adaptive mechanisms elicited are not sufficient to ...
Malerød Lene - - 2002
SR-BI mediates exchange of cholesterol between HDL and cells, and is a crucial factor in the transport of excessive cellular cholesterol from extrahepatic tissues to the liver ("reverse cholesterol transport") and, therefore, also for cholesterol homeostasis. Hepatic SR-BI mediates transfer of HDL-cholesterol to the hepatocytes where cholesterol may be metabolised ...
Sun Yu - - 2003
Liver X receptor/retinoid X receptor (LXR/RXR) transcription factors have been found to induce a number of genes involved in the regulation of cellular cholesterol efflux, including the ATP-binding cassette transporter A1 (ABCA1), which mediates the active efflux of cellular cholesterol and phospholipids to extracellular acceptors, such as apolipoprotein A-I (apoA-I). ...
Meaney Steve - - 2002
Oxysterols possess powerful biological activities. Some of their effects on the regulation of key enzymes are similar to those of cholesterol, but are much more potent. One of the critical properties of oxysterols is their ability to pass lipophilic membranes at a high rate. Transfer of unesterified 25-hydroxycholesterol from red ...
Romanenko Victor G - - 2002
Membrane potential of aortic endothelial cells under resting conditions is dominated by inward-rectifier K(+) channels belonging to the Kir 2 family. Regulation of endothelial Kir by membrane cholesterol was studied in bovine aortic endothelial cells by altering the sterol composition of the cell membrane. Our results show that enriching the ...
Karten Barbara - - 2002
Niemann-Pick type-C (NPC) disease is characterized by a progressive loss of neurons and an accumulation of unesterified cholesterol within the endocytic pathway. Unlike other tissues, however, NPC1-deficient brains do not accumulate cholesterol but whether or not NPC1-deficient neurons accumulate cholesterol is not clear. Therefore, as most studies on cholesterol homeostasis ...
Lambert Gilles - - 2003
To address the importance of the farnesoid X-receptor (FXR; NR1H4) for normal cholesterol homeostasis, we evaluated the major pathways of cholesterol metabolism in the FXR-deficient (-/-) mouse model. Compared with wild-type, FXR(-/-) mice have increased plasma high density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol and a markedly reduced rate of plasma HDL cholesterol ...
Basso Federica - - 2003
The current model for reverse cholesterol transport proposes that HDL transports excess cholesterol derived primarily from peripheral cells to the liver for removal. However, recent studies in ABCA1 transgenic mice suggest that the liver itself may be a major source of HDL cholesterol (HDL-C). To directly investigate the hepatic contribution ...
Gong Jian-Sheng - - 2002
Recently, we have found that alterations in cellular cholesterol metabolism are involved in promotion of tau phosphorylation (Fan et al. [2001] J. Neurochem. 76: 391-400; Sawamura et al. [2001] J. Biol. Chem. 276:10314-10319). In addition, we have shown that amyloid beta-protein (A beta) promotes cholesterol release to form A beta-lipid ...
Yanagisawa Katsuhiko - - 2002
Fundamental questions on the pathogenesis of Alzheimer's disease (AD) are how nontoxic, soluble amyloid beta-protein (A beta) is converted to its toxic, aggregated form and how functional tau is hyperphosphorylated to form neurofibrillary tangles. Growing evidence from recent biochemical and cell biological studies suggests that altered cholesterol metabolism in neurons ...
Tuckey Robert C - - 2002
The steroidogenic acute regulatory protein (StAR) mediates the acute stimulation of steroid synthesis by tropic hormones in steroidogenic cells. StAR interacts with the outer mitochondrial membrane and facilitates the rate-limiting transfer of cholesterol to the inner mitochondrial membrane where cytochrome P-450scc converts this cholesterol into pregnenolone. We tested the ability ...
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