Open Access
Scientific Reports, volume 6, issue 1, publication number 30889
High-density lipoprotein inhibits ox-LDL-induced adipokine secretion by upregulating SR-BI expression and suppressing ER Stress pathway
Guohua Song
1
,
Xia Wu
1, 2, 3
,
Pu Zhang
3
,
Yang Yu
1
,
Mingfeng Yang
1
,
Jiao Peng
1
,
Ni Wang
4
,
Haiming Song
4
,
You Wu
1
,
Xiangjian Zhang
5
,
Huaxia Liu
2
,
Shucun Qin
1
1
Institute of Atherosclerosis, Key Laboratory of Atherosclerosis in Universities of Shandong, TaiShan Medical University, Taian, China
|
2
Institute of Nursing, TaiShan Medical University, Taian, China
|
3
Central Hospital of Taian City, Taian, China
|
4
Maternal and child health hospital of Daiyue District, Taian, China
|
5
Hebei Collaborative Innovation Center for Cardio-cerebrovascular Disease and Hebei Key Laboratory of Vascular Homeostasis, Shijiazhuang, China
|
Publication type: Journal Article
Publication date: 2016-07-29
PubMed ID:
27468698
Multidisciplinary
Abstract
Endoplasmic reticulum stress (ERS) in adipocytes can modulate adipokines secretion. The aim of this study was to explore the protective effect of high-density lipoprotein (HDL) on oxidized low-density lipoprotein (ox-LDL)-induced ERS-C/EBP homologous protein (CHOP) pathway-mediated adipokine secretion. Our results showed that serum adipokines, including visfatin, resistin and TNF-α, correlated inversely with serum HDL cholesterol level in patients with abdominal obesity. In vitro, like ERS inhibitor 4-phenylbutyric acid (PBA), HDL inhibited ox-LDL- or tunicamycin (TM, an ERS inducer)-induced increase in visfatin and resistin secretion. Moreover, HDL inhibited ox-LDL-induced free cholesterol (FC) accumulation in whole cell lysate and in the endoplasmic reticulum. Additionally, like PBA, HDL inhibited ox-LDL- or TM-induced activation of ERS response as assessed by the decreased phosphorylation of protein kinase-like ER kinase and eukaryotic translation initiation factor 2α and reduced nuclear translocation of activating transcription factor 6 as well as the downregulation of Bip and CHOP. Furthermore, HDL increased scavenger receptor class B type I (SR-BI) expression and SR-BI siRNA treatment abolished the inhibitory effects of HDL on ox-LDL-induced FC accumulation and CHOP upregulation. These data indicate that HDL may suppress ox-LDL-induced FC accumulation in adipocytes through upregulation of SR-BI, subsequently preventing ox-LDL-induced ER stress-CHOP pathway-mediated adipocyte inflammation.
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