» Articles » PMID: 9148923

Quantitation of the Pool of Cholesterol Associated with Acyl-CoA:cholesterol Acyltransferase in Human Fibroblasts

Overview
Journal J Biol Chem
Specialty Biochemistry
Date 1997 May 16
PMID 9148923
Citations 40
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

The esterification of cholesterol in homogenates of human fibroblasts was explored as a means of estimating the size of the pool of cholesterol associated with the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) in vivo. The rationale was that the acyl-coenzyme A:cholesterol acyltransferase (ACAT) in homogenates should have access only to cholesterol associated with the (rough) ER membrane fragments in which it resides. Reacting whole homogenates to completion with an excess of [14C]oleoyl-CoA converted approximately 0.1-2% of total cell-free cholesterol to [14C]cholesteryl esters. Control studies indicated that membranes not associated with ACAT did not contribute cholesterol to this reaction. The extent of in vitro cholesterol esterification varied with pretreatment of the cells. Exposing intact cells to serum lipoproteins, oxysterols, or sphingomyelinase increased cholesterol esterification in homogenates severalfold; exposing the cells to mevinolin or cholesterol oxidase had the opposite effect. The variation in cholesterol esterification did not correlate with either the total cellular cholesterol or the intrinsic activity of ACAT, neither of which was changed significantly by the pretreatments. Rather, the total amount of cholesterol esterified in homogenates paralleled the rate of cholesterol esterification in the corresponding intact cells. The pool of cholesterol esterified in vitro therefore appears to reflect that associated with the ER in vivo. Since several of the mechanisms keeping cell cholesterol under tight feedback control are themselves located in the ER, this pool might not only be regulated physiologically, but could, in turn, help to regulate homeostatic effector pathways.

Citing Articles

Nonvesicular trafficking of cholesterol by Aster proteins.

Norris D, Aw Y, Yang H Life Metab. 2025; 2(2):load003.

PMID: 39872734 PMC: 11749630. DOI: 10.1093/lifemeta/load003.


The contribution of mitochondria-associated ER membranes to cholesterol homeostasis.

Montesinos J, Kabra K, Uceda M, Larrea D, Agrawal R, Tamucci K bioRxiv. 2024; .

PMID: 39605513 PMC: 11601226. DOI: 10.1101/2024.11.11.622945.


Oxysterols in Infectious Diseases.

Foo C, Fessler M, Ronacher K Adv Exp Med Biol. 2023; 1440:125-147.

PMID: 38036878 DOI: 10.1007/978-3-031-43883-7_7.


Robust homeostasis of cellular cholesterol is a consequence of endogenous antithetic integral control.

Scheepers R, Araujo R Front Cell Dev Biol. 2023; 11:1244297.

PMID: 37842086 PMC: 10570530. DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2023.1244297.


Regulation of cellular cholesterol distribution via non-vesicular lipid transport at ER-Golgi contact sites.

Naito T, Yang H, Koh D, Mahajan D, Lu L, Saheki Y Nat Commun. 2023; 14(1):5867.

PMID: 37735529 PMC: 10514280. DOI: 10.1038/s41467-023-41213-w.