Hengstschlager-Ottnad_1995_J.Biol.Chem_270_26139

Reference

Title : Chicken lecithin-cholesterol acyltransferase. Molecular characterization reveals unusual structure and expression pattern - Hengstschlager-Ottnad_1995_J.Biol.Chem_270_26139
Author(s) : Hengstschlager-Ottnad E , Kuchler K , Schneider WJ
Ref : Journal of Biological Chemistry , 270 :26139 , 1995
Abstract :

Rapidly growing oocytes in the laying hen are, in addition to the liver, targets of the so-called "reverse cholesterol transport" (RCT) (Vieira, P.M., Vieira, A.V., Sanders, E.J., Steyrer, E., Nimpf, J., and Schneider, W.J. (1995) J. Lipid Res. 36, 601-610), pointing to the importance of this process in nonplacental reproduction. We have begun to delineate the details of this unique transport pathway branch by molecular characterization of the first nonmammalian lecithin-cholesterol acyltransferase (LCAT), the enzyme that catalyzes an early step in RCT. The biological significance of the enzyme is underscored by the high degree of protein sequence identity (73%) maintained from chicken to man. Interestingly, the conservation extends much less to the cysteine residues; in fact, two of the cysteines thought to be important in mammalian enzymes (residues 31 and 184 in man) are absent from the chicken enzyme, providing proof of their dispensability for enzymatic activity. Antibodies prepared against a chicken LCAT fusion protein cross-react with human LCAT and identify a 64-kDa protein present in enzymatically active fractions obtained by hydrophobic chromatography of chicken serum. The developmental and tissue distribution pattern of LCAT in females is striking; during embryogenesis and adolescence, LCAT expression is extremely high in liver but undetectable in brain. Upon onset of laying, however, brain LCAT mRNA increases suddenly and is maintained at levels 5 times higher than in liver, in stark contrast to most mammals. In adult roosters, the levels of LCAT transcripts in brain are lower than in liver. Together with the molecular characterization of chicken LCAT, these newly discovered developmental changes and gender differences in its expression establish the avian oocyte/liver system as a powerful model to delineate in vivo regulatory elements of RCT.

PubMedSearch : Hengstschlager-Ottnad_1995_J.Biol.Chem_270_26139
PubMedID: 7592817
Gene_locus related to this paper: chick-lcat

Related information

Gene_locus chick-lcat

Citations formats

Hengstschlager-Ottnad E, Kuchler K, Schneider WJ (1995)
Chicken lecithin-cholesterol acyltransferase. Molecular characterization reveals unusual structure and expression pattern
Journal of Biological Chemistry 270 :26139

Hengstschlager-Ottnad E, Kuchler K, Schneider WJ (1995)
Journal of Biological Chemistry 270 :26139