Journal of Lipid Research (Oct 2007)

Apolipoprotein A-II is catabolized in the kidney as a function of its plasma concentration

  • Sonia Dugué-Pujol,
  • Xavier Rousset,
  • Danielle Château,
  • Danièle Pastier,
  • Christophe Klein,
  • Jeannine Demeurie,
  • Charlotte Cywiner-Golenzer,
  • Michèle Chabert,
  • Pierre Verroust,
  • Jean Chambaz,
  • François-Patrick Châtelet,
  • Athina-Despina Kalopissis

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 48, no. 10
pp. 2151 – 2161

Abstract

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We investigated in vivo catabolism of apolipoprotein A-II (apo A-II), a major determinant of plasma HDL levels. Like apoA-I, murine apoA-II (mapoA-II) and human apoA-II (hapoA-II) were reabsorbed in the first segment of kidney proximal tubules of control and hapoA-II-transgenic mice, respectively. ApoA-II colocalized in brush border membranes with cubilin and megalin (the apoA-I receptor and coreceptor, respectively), with mapoA-I in intracellular vesicles of tubular epithelial cells, and was targeted to lysosomes, suggestive of degradation. By use of three transgenic lines with plasma hapoA-II concentrations ranging from normal to three times higher, we established an association between plasma concentration and renal catabolism of hapoA-II. HapoA-II was rapidly internalized in yolk sac epithelial cells expressing high levels of cubilin and megalin, colocalized with cubilin and megalin on the cell surface, and effectively competed with apoA-I for uptake, which was inhibitable by anti-cubilin antibodies. Kidney cortical cells that only express megalin internalized LDL but not apoA-II, apoA-I, or HDL, suggesting that megalin is not an apoA-II receptor. We show that apoA-II is efficiently reabsorbed in kidney proximal tubules in relation to its plasma concentration.

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