Vivian Franklin
University of Ottawa
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Featured researches published by Vivian Franklin.
Cell Metabolism | 2011
Mireille Ouimet; Vivian Franklin; Esther Mak; Xianghai Liao; Ira Tabas; Yves L. Marcel
The lipid droplet (LD) is the major site of cholesterol storage in macrophage foam cells and is a potential therapeutic target for the treatment of atherosclerosis. Cholesterol, stored as cholesteryl esters (CEs), is liberated from this organelle and delivered to cholesterol acceptors. The current paradigm attributes all cytoplasmic CE hydrolysis to the action of neutral CE hydrolases. Here, we demonstrate an important role for lysosomes in LD CE hydrolysis in cholesterol-loaded macrophages, in addition to that mediated by neutral hydrolases. Furthermore, we demonstrate that LDs are delivered to lysosomes via autophagy, where lysosomal acid lipase (LAL) acts to hydrolyze LD CE to generate free cholesterol mainly for ABCA1-dependent efflux; this process is specifically induced upon macrophage cholesterol loading. We conclude that, in macrophage foam cells, lysosomal hydrolysis contributes to the mobilization of LD-associated cholesterol for reverse cholesterol transport.
Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology | 2007
Ming-Dong Wang; Vivian Franklin; Yves L. Marcel
Background—ATP-binding cassette transporter A1 (ABCA1) is a key mediator of cholesterol efflux to apoA-I in cholesterol loaded macrophages, a first step of reverse cholesterol transport (RCT) in vivo. Macrophage specific abca1 inactivation or overexpression, respectively, accelerated or suppressed the development of atherosclerosis in mouse models. However, it is yet to be established that the ABCA1 effect is related to specific changes in RCT from the macrophages in vivo. Methods And Results—Bone marrow–derived macrophages from abca1−/− or abca1+/− mice were labeled with 3H-cholesterol-AcLDL or 3H-cholesterol-LDL and injected into abca1+/+ abca1+/− or abca1−/− mice. When injected into abca1+/+ mice, return of 3H-cholesterol from labeled abca1−/− macrophages to serum, liver, bile, and feces was reduced by 50% (P=0.01) compared with control. When labeled wild-type macrophages were injected into abca1−/− mice, as compared with wild-type mice, the return of 3H-cholesterol to serum, liver, bile, and feces was also reduced. Conclusions—ABCA1 expression in macrophages contributes significantly to in vivo macrophage RCT. The important residual RCT observed from abca1−/− macrophages highlight the functionality of transporters that efflux to HDL.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2005
Jovana Maric; Robert S. Kiss; Vivian Franklin; Yves L. Marcel
Hepatocytes, which are the main site of apolipoprotein (apo)A-I and ATP-binding cassette transporter A1 (ABCA1) expression, are also the main source of circulating high density lipoprotein. Here we have characterized the intracellular lipidation of newly synthesized apoA-I, in primary hepatocytes cultured with [3H]choline to label choline-phospholipids, low density lipoprotein-[3H]cholesterol to label the cell surface, or [3H]mevalonate to label de novo synthesized cholesterol. Phospholipidation of apoA-I is significant and most evident in endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and medial Golgi, both in the lumen and on the membrane fractions of the ER and medial Golgi. In the presence of cycloheximide, endogenous apoA-I is substantially phospholipidated intracellularly but acquires some additional lipid after export out of the cell. In cells labeled with low density lipoprotein-[3H]cholesterol, intracellular cholesterol lipidation of apoA-I is entirely absent, but the secreted apoA-I rapidly accumulates cholesterol after secretion from the cell in the media. On the other hand, de novo synthesized cholesterol can lipidate apoA-I intracellularly. We also showed the interaction between apoA-I and ABCA1 in ER and Golgi fractions. In hepatocytes lacking ABCA1, lipidation by low density lipoprotein-cholesterol was significantly reduced at the plasma membrane, phospholipidation and lipidation by de novo synthesized sterols were both reduced in Golgi compartments, whereas ER lipidation remained mostly unchanged. Therefore, the early lipidation in ER is ABCA1 independent, but in contrast, the lipidation of apoA-I in Golgi and at the plasma membrane requires ABCA1. Thus, we demonstrated that apoA-I phospholipidation starts early in the ER and is partially dependent on ABCA1, with the bulk of lipidation by phospholipids and cholesterol occurring in the Golgi and at the plasma membrane, respectively. Finally, we showed that the previously reported association of newly synthesized apoA-I and apoB (Zheng, H., Kiss, R. S., Franklin, V., Wang, M. D., Haidar, B., and Marcel, Y. L. (2005) J. Biol. Chem. 280, 21612–21621) occurs after secretion at the cell surface.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007
Ming-Dong Wang; Vivian Franklin; Meenakshi Sundaram; Robert S. Kiss; Kenneth Ho; Michel Gallant; Yves L. Marcel
Niemann-Pick type C1 (Npc1) protein inactivation results in lipid accumulation in late endosomes and lysosomes, leading to a defect of ATP binding cassette protein A1 (Abca1)-mediated lipid efflux to apolipoprotein A-I (apoA-I) in macrophages and fibroblasts. However, the role of Npc1 in Abca1-mediated lipid efflux to apoA-I in hepatocytes, the major cells contributing to HDL formation, is still unknown. Here we show that, whereas lipid efflux to apoA-I in Npc1-null macrophages is impaired, the lipidation of endogenously synthesized apoA-I by low density lipoprotein-derived cholesterol or de novo synthesized cholesterol or phospholipids in Npc1-null hepatocytes is significantly increased by about 1-, 3-, and 8-fold, respectively. The increased cholesterol efflux reflects a major increase of Abca1 protein in Npc1-null hepatocytes, which contrasts with the decrease observed in Npc1-null macrophages. The increased Abca1 expression is largely post-transcriptional, because Abca1 mRNA is only slightly increased and Lxrα mRNA is not changed, and Lxrα target genes are reduced. This differs from the regulation of Abcg1 expression, which is up-regulated at both mRNA and protein levels in Npc1-null cells. Abca1 protein translation rate is higher in Npc1-null hepatocytes, compared with wild type hepatocytes as measured by [35S]methionine incorporation, whereas there is no difference for the degradation of newly synthesized Abca1 in these two types of hepatocytes. Cathepsin D, which we recently identified as a positive modulator of Abca1, is markedly increased at both mRNA and protein levels by Npc1 inactivation in hepatocytes but not in macrophages. Consistent with this, inhibition of cathepsin D with pepstatin A reduced the Abca1 protein level in both Npc1-inactivated and WT hepatocytes. Therefore, Abca1 expression is specifically regulated in hepatocytes, where Npc1 activity modulates cathepsin D expression and Abca1 protein translation rate.
Journal of Lipid Research | 2007
Ming-Dong Wang; Robert S. Kiss; Vivian Franklin; Heidi M. McBride; Stewart C. Whitman; Yves L. Marcel
Endocytosis of LDL and modified LDL represents regulated and unregulated cholesterol delivery to macrophages. To elucidate the mechanisms of cellular cholesterol transport and egress under both conditions, various primary macrophages were labeled and loaded with cholesterol or cholesteryl ester from LDL or acetylated low density lipoprotein (AcLDL), and the cellular cholesterol traffic pathways were examined. Confocal microscopy using fluorescently labeled 3,3′-dioctyldecyloxacarbocyanine perchlorate-labeled LDL and 1,1′-dioctyldecyl-3,3,3′,3′-tetramethylindodicarbocyanine perchlorate-labeled AcLDL demonstrated their discrete traffic pathways and accumulation in distinct endosomes. ABCA1-mediated cholesterol efflux to apolipoprotein A-I (apoA-I) was much greater for AcLDL-loaded macrophages compared with LDL. Treatment with the liver X receptor ligand 22-OH increased efflux to apoA-I in AcLDL-loaded but not LDL-loaded cells. In contrast, at a level equivalent to AcLDL, LDL-derived cholesterol was preferentially effluxed to HDL, in keeping with increased ABCG1. In vivo studies of reverse cholesterol transport (RCT) from cholesterol-labeled macrophages injected intraperitoneally demonstrated that LDL-derived cholesterol was more efficiently transported to the liver and secreted into bile than AcLDL-derived cholesterol. This indicates a greater efficiency of HDL than lipid-poor apoA-I in interstitial fluid in controlling in vivo RCT. These assays, taken together, emphasize the importance of mediators of diffusional cholesterol efflux in RCT.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2005
Hui Zheng; Robert S. Kiss; Vivian Franklin; Ming-Dong Wang; Bassam Haidar; Yves L. Marcel
The liver is the major site of both apolipoprotein A-I (apoA-I) synthesis and ATP-binding cassette transporter A1 (ABCA1) expression. Here, we compare the lipidation with cholesterol and phospholipid of newly synthesized human apoA-I (hapoA-I) using adenoviral vector-mediated endogenous expression or exogenously added hapoA-I in wild type and ABCA1-null hepatocytes. Hepatocytes were labeled with [3H]cholesterol (delivered with LDL or methyl-β-cyclodextrin), [3H]mevalonate, or [3H]choline. ABCA1 deficiency decreased apoA-I phospholipidation by 80%, but acquisition of de novo synthesized and exogenous cholesterol only decreased by 40–60%. The transfer of de novo synthesized cholesterol to apoA-I was decreased at all time points, but that of exogenously delivered cholesterol was independent of ABCA1 activity at the early time points. Progesterone does not affect apoA-I synthesis or its lipidation but inhibited the early phase of apoA-I cholesterol lipidation in both wild type and ABCA1-null hepatocytes. Fast protein liquid chromatography analysis of medium lipoproteins confirmed that with ABCA1 deficiency, the proportion of secreted high density lipoprotein-associated apoA-I and cholesterol decreased by about 50%. The very low density lipoprotein (VLDL)/LDL size fraction also contained a significant level of cholesterol in ABCA1 deficiency, consistent with the result of immunoprecipitations showing the presence of lipoproteins with both apoA-I and murine apoB. ApoA-I lipidation with newly synthesized cholesterol in ABCA1-null hepatocytes was significantly decreased by brefeldin A and monensin. In conclusion, we demonstrate that: (i) whereas most hepatic phospholipidation of apoA-I is mediated by ABCA1, acquisition of cholesterol depends on active transfer from intracellular compartments by ABCA1-dependent and -independent pathways, both sensitive to progesterone and (ii) there is separate regulation of phospholipid and cholesterol lipidation of apoA-I in hepatocytes.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2003
Robert S. Kiss; Dan C. McManus; Vivian Franklin; Wei Ling Tan; Andrea McKenzie; Giovanna Chimini; Yves L. Marcel
Biochemistry | 2002
Philippe G. Frank; Yves L. Marcel; Margery A. Connelly; Douglas M. Lublin; Vivian Franklin; David L. Williams; Michael P. Lisanti
Biochemistry | 1999
Jim W. Burgess; Philippe G. Frank; Vivian Franklin; Ping Liang; Dan C. McManus; Marc Desforges; Eric Rassart; Yves L. Marcel
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2000
Dan C. McManus; Brian R. Scott; Philippe G. Frank; Vivian Franklin; Joshua R. Schultz; Yves L. Marcel