Apolipoprotein A-V N-terminal domain lipid interaction properties in Vitro explain the hypertriglyceridemic phenotype associated with natural truncation mutants

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Abstract

The N-terminal 146 residues of apolipoprotein (apo) A-V adopt a helix bundle conformation in the absence of lipid. Because similarly sized truncation mutants in human subjects correlate with severe hypertriglyceridemia, the lipid binding properties of apoA-V(1-146) were studied. Upon incubation with phospholipid in vitro, apoA-V(1-146) forms reconstituted high density lipoproteins 15-17 nm in diameter. Far UV circular dichroism spectroscopy analyses of lipid-bound apoA-V(1-146) yielded an α-helix secondary structure content of 60%. Fourier transformed infrared spectroscopy analysis revealed that apoAV(1-146) α-helix segments align perpendicular with respect to particle phospholipid fatty acyl chains. Fluorescence spectroscopy of single Trp variant apoA-V(1-146) indicates that lipid interaction is accompanied by a conformational change. The data are consistent with a model wherein apoA-V(1-146) α-helices circumscribe the perimeter of a disk-shaped bilayer. The ability of apoA-V(1-146) to solubilize dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine vesicles at a rate faster than full-length apoA-V suggests that N- and C-terminal interactions in the full-length protein modulate its lipid binding properties. Preferential association of apoA-V(1-146) with murine plasma HDL, but not with VLDL, suggests that particle size is a determinant of its lipoprotein binding specificity. It may be concluded that defective lipoprotein binding of truncated apoA-V contributes to the hypertriglyceridemia phenotype associated with truncation mutations in human subjects. © 2009 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.

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Wong-Mauldin, K., Raussens, V., Forte, T. M., & Ryan, R. O. (2009). Apolipoprotein A-V N-terminal domain lipid interaction properties in Vitro explain the hypertriglyceridemic phenotype associated with natural truncation mutants. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 284(48), 33369–33376. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M109.040972

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