PLoS ONE (Jan 2012)

The effects of apolipoprotein F deficiency on high density lipoprotein cholesterol metabolism in mice.

  • William R Lagor,
  • David W Fields,
  • Sumeet A Khetarpal,
  • Arthi Kumaravel,
  • Wen Lin,
  • Nathaniel Weintraub,
  • Kaijin Wu,
  • Sarah F Hamm-Alvarez,
  • Denise Drazul-Schrader,
  • Margarita de la Llera-Moya,
  • George H Rothblat,
  • Daniel J Rader

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0031616
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 2
p. e31616

Abstract

Read online

Apolipoprotein F (apoF) is 29 kilodalton secreted sialoglycoprotein that resides on the HDL and LDL fractions of human plasma. Human ApoF is also known as Lipid Transfer Inhibitor protein (LTIP) based on its ability to inhibit cholesteryl ester transfer protein (CETP)-mediated transfer events between lipoproteins. In contrast to other apolipoproteins, ApoF is predicted to lack strong amphipathic alpha helices and its true physiological function remains unknown. We previously showed that overexpression of Apolipoprotein F in mice reduced HDL cholesterol levels by 20-25% by accelerating clearance from the circulation. In order to investigate the effect of physiological levels of ApoF expression on HDL cholesterol metabolism, we generated ApoF deficient mice. Unexpectedly, deletion of ApoF had no substantial impact on plasma lipid concentrations, HDL size, lipid or protein composition. Sex-specific differences were observed in hepatic cholesterol content as well as serum cholesterol efflux capacity. Female ApoF KO mice had increased liver cholesteryl ester content relative to wild type controls on a chow diet (KO: 3.4+/-0.9 mg/dl vs. WT: 1.2+/-0.3 mg/dl, p<0.05). No differences were observed in ABCG1-mediated cholesterol efflux capacity in either sex. Interestingly, ApoB-depleted serum from male KO mice was less effective at promoting ABCA1-mediated cholesterol efflux from J774 macrophages relative to WT controls.