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ApoF knockdown increases cholesteryl ester transfer to LDL and impairs cholesterol clearance in fat-fed hamsters.

Richard E MortonYan LiuLahoucine Izem
Published in: Journal of lipid research (2019)
Cholesteryl ester transfer protein (CETP) regulates intravascular lipoprotein metabolism. In vitro studies indicate that ApoF alters CETP function by inhibiting its activity with LDL. To explore in vivo the complexities driving ApoF's effects on CETP, we developed a siRNA-based hamster model of ApoF knockdown. In both male and female hamsters on chow- or fat-fed diets, we measured lipoprotein levels and composition, determined CETP-mediated transfer of cholesteryl esters (CEs) between lipoproteins, and quantified reverse cholesterol transport (RCT). We found that apoF knockdown in chow-fed hamsters had no effect on lipoprotein levels or composition, but these ApoF-deficient lipoproteins supported 50-100% higher LDL CETP activity in vitro. ApoF knockdown in fat-fed male hamsters created a phenotype in which endogenous CETP-mediated CE transfer from HDL to LDL increased up to 2-fold, LDL cholesterol increased 40%, HDL declined 25%, LDL and HDL lipid compositions were altered, and hepatic LDLR gene expression was decreased. Diet-induced hypercholesterolemia obscured this phenotype on occasion. In fat-fed female hamsters, ApoF knockdown caused similar but smaller changes in plasma CETP activity and LDL cholesterol. Notably, ApoF knockdown impaired HDL RCT in fat-fed hamsters but increased sterol excretion in chow-fed animals. These in vivo data validate in vitro findings that ApoF regulates lipid transfer to LDL. The consequences of ApoF knockdown on lipoproteins and sterol excretion depend on the underlying lipid status. By minimizing the transfer of HDL-derived CE to LDL, ApoF helps control LDL cholesterol levels when LDL clearance mechanisms are limiting.
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