Document Type
Article
Publication Date
12-25-2009
Publication Title
The Journal of Biological Chemistry
Abstract
High density lipoprotein (HDL), the carrier of so-called “good” cholesterol, serves as the major athero-protective lipoprotein and has emerged as a key therapeutic target for cardiovascular disease. We applied small angle neutron scattering (SANS) with contrast variation and selective isotopic deuteration to the study of nascent HDL to obtain the low resolution structure in solution of the overall time-averaged conformation of apolipoprotein AI (apoA-I) versus the lipid (acyl chain) core of the particle. Remarkably, apoA-I is observed to possess an open helical shape that wraps around a central ellipsoidal lipid phase. Using the low resolution SANS shapes of the protein and lipid core as scaffolding, an all-atom computational model for the protein and lipid components of nascent HDL was developed by integrating complementary structural data from hydrogen/deuterium exchange mass spectrometry and previously published constraints from multiple biophysical techniques. Both SANS data and the new computational model, the double superhelix model, suggest an unexpected structural arrangement of protein and lipids of nascent HDL, an anti-parallel double superhelix wrapped around an ellipsoidal lipid phase. The protein and lipid organization in nascent HDL envisages a potential generalized mechanism for lipoprotein biogenesis and remodeling, biological processes critical to sterol and lipid transport, organismal energy metabolism, and innate immunity.
Recommended Citation
Wu, Zhiping; Gogonea, Valentin; Lee, Xavier; and Wagner, Mathew A., "Double Superhelix Model of High Density Lipoprotein" (2009). Chemistry Faculty Publications. 309.
https://engagedscholarship.csuohio.edu/scichem_facpub/309
DOI
10.1074/jbc.M109.039537
Version
Publisher's PDF
Volume
284
Issue
52
Comments
This work was supported, in whole or in part, by National Institutes of Health Grants P01 HL076491-055328, P01 HL077107-050004, P01 HL087018-02001, and 1R15 GM070469-01.