ApoA-I Milano stimulates lipolysis in adipose cells independently of cAMP/PKA activation.

Lindahl, Maria; Petrlova, Jitka; Dalla-Riva, Jonathan; Wasserstrom, Sebastian, et al. (2015). ApoA-I Milano stimulates lipolysis in adipose cells independently of cAMP/PKA activation.. Journal of Lipid Research, 56, (12), 2248 - 2259
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| Published | English
Authors:
Lindahl, Maria ; Petrlova, Jitka ; Dalla-Riva, Jonathan ; Wasserstrom, Sebastian , et al.
Department:
Glucose Transport and Protein Trafficking
Dermatology and Venereology (Lund)
Medical Protein Science
Cellular Biomechanics
Molecular Cell Biology
Protein Phosphorylation
Molecular Endocrinology
EXODIAB: Excellence of Diabetes Research in Sweden
Research Group:
Glucose Transport and Protein Trafficking
Medical Protein Science
Cellular Biomechanics
Protein Phosphorylation
Molecular Endocrinology
Abstract:
ApoA-I, the main protein component of high-density lipoprotein (HDL), is suggested to be involved in metabolic homeostasis. We examined the effects of Milano, a naturally occurring ApoA-I variant, about which little mechanistic information is available. Remarkably, high fat-fed mice treated with Milano displayed a rapid weight loss greater than ApoA-I WT treated mice, and a significantly reduced adipose tissue mass, without an inflammatory response. Further, lipolysis in adipose cells isolated from mice treated with either WT or Milano was increased. In primary rat adipose cells, Milano stimulated cholesterol efflux and increased glycerol release, independently of β-adrenergic stimulation and phosphorylation of hormone sensitive lipase (Ser563) and perilipin (Ser522). Stimulation with Milano had a significantly greater effect on glycerol release compared with WT but similar effect on cholesterol efflux. Pharmacological inhibition or siRNA silencing of ABCA-1 did not diminish Milano-stimulated lipolysis, although binding to the cell surface was decreased, as analyzed by fluorescence microscopy. Interestingly, methyl-β-cyclodextrin, a well-described cholesterol acceptor, dose-dependently stimulated lipolysis. Together, these results suggest that decreased fat mass and increased lipolysis following Milano treatment in vivo is partly explained by a novel mechanism at the adipose cell level comprising stimulation of lipolysis independently of the canonical cAMP/PKA signaling pathway.
ISSN:
1539-7262

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