iScience (Sep 2021)

A host lipase prevents lipopolysaccharide-induced foam cell formation

  • Jintao Feng,
  • Wei Jiang,
  • Xiaofang Cheng,
  • Benkun Zou,
  • Alan W. Varley,
  • Ting Liu,
  • Guojun Qian,
  • Wenjiao Zeng,
  • Jianguo Tang,
  • Qiang Zhao,
  • Yiwei Chu,
  • Yuanyuan Wei,
  • Xiaobo Li,
  • Robert S. Munford,
  • Mingfang Lu

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 9
p. 103004

Abstract

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Summary: Although microbe-associated molecular pattern (MAMP) molecules can promote cholesterol accumulation in macrophages, the existence of a host-derived MAMP inactivation mechanism that prevents foam cell formation has not been described. Here, we tested the ability of acyloxyacyl hydrolase (AOAH), the host lipase that inactivates gram-negative bacterial lipopolysaccharides (LPSs), to prevent foam cell formation in mice. Following exposure to small intraperitoneal dose(s) of LPSs, Aoah−/− macrophages produced more low-density lipoprotein receptor and less apolipoprotein E and accumulated more cholesterol than did Aoah+/+ macrophages. The Aoah−/− macrophages also maintained several pro-inflammatory features. Using a perivascular collar placement model, we found that Aoah−/− mice developed more carotid artery foam cells than did Aoah+/+ mice after they had been fed a high fat, high cholesterol diet, and received small doses of LPSs. This is the first demonstration that an enzyme that inactivates a stimulatory MAMP in vivo can reduce cholesterol accumulation and inflammation in arterial macrophages.

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