Recent evidence suggests that abnormalities in the metabolism of
triglycerides and fatty acids are linked to the occurrence of premature
coronary artery disease. In cells, fatty acids are used as a source of
energy, as building blocks for membrane biogenesis, and as precursors for
complex regulatory molecules such as eicosanoids and thromboxanes. The
transport of fatty acids among plasma and the many cellular compartments is
a highly regulated process that is made all the more complex by
postprandial lipemia and the attendant lipolysis. A major theme of the
BCM-SCOR is that abnormalities in triglyceride and fatty acid metabolism
contribute to atherosclerosis. Since elevation in fatty acids can
contribute increased secretion of very low density lipoprotein-
triglycerides, fatty acid and triglyceride metabolism are directly
connected.
Acylation-stimulating protein (ASP or BP-1) is one of three recently
described proteins that promote the intracellular accumulation of fatty
acids and their subsequent conversion of triglycerides, particularly in
peripheral tissue. The role that this protein plays in abnormal lipid
metabolism and atherosclerosis is not known. The purpose of this project
is to answer the following questions: 1] Is plasma ASP elevated in
metabolic states where plasma triglycerides and free fatty acids are
raised? 2] Does ASP bind to a cell-surface protein in those cells where
its activity is expressed? 3] What intracellular enzymes of lipid
synthesis are effected by ASP? 4] Does ASP play an essential physiological
role? 5] What are the structures of the functional domains of ASP? These
questions will be answered by in vivo studies in hamsters,
immunocytochemistry, subcellular organelle isolation, digital imaging
microscopy, quantitative lipid analysis, gas and liquid chromatography,
immunoassays, peptide sequencing and synthesis and structural analysis.
The long term goal of this project is to identify the role of acylation
stimulating proteins in controlling the flux of fatty acids in plasma and
cells and to determine if an abnormality in the function of this class of
proteins is important in abnormal triglyceride metabolism nd atherogenesis.
Public Health Relevance Statement
Data not available.
NIH Spending Category
No NIH Spending Category available.
Project Terms
acylationadipocyteschemical transfer reactionfatty acid transportfibroblastsfree fatty acidsgas chromatographyhamstershigh density lipoproteinsimmunocytochemistryimmunologic assay /testlipid biosynthesisliquid chromatographylow density lipoproteinmicroscopypeptide chemical synthesisprotein sequenceprotein structureproteinstransport proteinstriglyceridesvery low density lipoprotein
No Sub Projects information available for 5P50HL027341-14 0011
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