Apolipoprotein A-I conformation in reconstituted discoidal lipoproteins varying in phospholipid and cholesterol content
1995
Bergeron, J. | Frank, P.G. | Scales, D. | Meng, Q.H. | Castro, G. | Marcel, Y.L.
The effects of the size and cholesterol content on the conformation of apolipoprotein A-I (apoA-I) have been studied in reconstituted discoidal lipoproteins containing two apoA-I per particle (Lp2A-I). The immunoreactivity of a series of 13 epitopes distributed along the apoA-I sequence has been evaluated in Lp2A-I with a phospholipid/apoA-I molar ratio ranging from 31 to 156 and in Lp2A-I with constant phospholipids but varying in cholesterol content from 0 to 22 molecules. The results are compatible with a three domain structure in apoA-I in which the central domain is located between residues 99 and 143 and postulated to be a hinged domain that responds differentially to changes in phospholipid and cholesterol contents. Increasing the phospholipid content results in significant changes of epitope immunoreactivity throughout the N-terminal and central domains of apoA-I with fewer modifications in the C-terminal domain. In contrast, increasing Lp2A-I cholesterol content modifies only the immunoreactivity of two central epitopes, A11 (residues 99-132) and 5F6 (residues 118-148), and an extreme N-terminal epitope, 4H1 (residues 2-8). Interestingly, the effects of increasing cholesterol or phospholipids on these epitopes are opposite. This suggests a specific effect of cholesterol on the central domain tertiary structure between residues 99 and 143. Competition binding assays among pairs of antibodies binding to apoA-I on Lp2A-I are best explained by invoking inter- as well as intramolecular competitions. The specificity of the intermolecular competitions suggests an N to C termini arrangement of the two apoA-I molecules around the disc. Increasing the phospholipid content of Lp2A-I mainly increases the competitions between 3G10 and antibodies binding to most adjacent epitopes. Simultaneously as Lp2A-I enlarges, several of these antibodies also enhance the binding of 3G10. This has been interpreted as evidence of a structural rearrangement of apoA-I as a result of the size increase where the alpha-helix (residues 99-121) that contains the 3G10 epitope is increasingly interacting with lipids resulting in the enhanced expression of this epitope. The increasing interactions of apoA-I helices with lipids in the enlarging discs are compatible with previous reports of a greater apoA-I stability in the large discs. By contrast, cholesterol has limited but specific effects on antibody competitions and decreases the interaction of the N-terminal domain with the domain containing 3G10, either by direct cholesterol protein interaction or by modification of the lipid phase packing.
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