Mechanisms underlying adverse effects of HDL on eNOS-activating pathways in patients with coronary artery disease

Christian Besler(University of Zurich), Kathrin Heinrich(Cardiovascular Institute Hospital), Lucia Rohrer(University of Zurich), Carola Doerries(Cardiovascular Institute Hospital), Meliana Riwanto(University Hospital of Zurich), Diana M. Shih(University of California, Los Angeles), Angeliki Chroni, Keiko Yonekawa(Cardiovascular Institute Hospital), Sokrates Stein(Czech Academy of Sciences, Institute of Physiology), Nicola Schaefer(University of Zurich), Maja Mueller(University Hospital of Zurich), Alexander Akhmedov(Cardiovascular Institute Hospital), Georgios Daniil, Costantina Manes(University Hospital of Zurich), Christian Templin(University Hospital of Zurich), Christophe Wyss(Czech Academy of Sciences, Institute of Physiology), Willibald Maier(Czech Academy of Sciences, Institute of Physiology), Felix C. Tanner(Swiss Integrative Center for Human Health), Christian M. Matter(Czech Academy of Sciences, Institute of Physiology), Roberto Corti(University Hospital of Zurich), Clement E. Furlong, Aldons J. Lusis(University of California, Los Angeles), Arnold von Eckardstein(University Hospital of Zurich), Alan M. Fogelman(University of California, Los Angeles), Thomas F. Lüscher(Czech Academy of Sciences, Institute of Physiology), Ulf Landmesser(Swiss Integrative Center for Human Health)
Journal of Clinical Investigation
June 24, 2011
Cited by 527Open Access

Abstract

Therapies that raise levels of HDL, which is thought to exert atheroprotective effects via effects on endothelium, are being examined for the treatment or prevention of coronary artery disease (CAD). However, the endothelial effects of HDL are highly heterogeneous, and the impact of HDL of patients with CAD on the activation of endothelial eNOS and eNOS-dependent pathways is unknown. Here we have demonstrated that, in contrast to HDL from healthy subjects, HDL from patients with stable CAD or an acute coronary syndrome (HDLCAD) does not have endothelial antiinflammatory effects and does not stimulate endothelial repair because it fails to induce endothelial NO production. Mechanistically, this was because HDLCAD activated endothelial lectin-like oxidized LDL receptor 1 (LOX-1), triggering endothelial PKCβII activation, which in turn inhibited eNOS-activating pathways and eNOS-dependent NO production. We then identified reduced HDL-associated paraoxonase 1 (PON1) activity as one molecular mechanism leading to the generation of HDL with endothelial PKCβII-activating properties, at least in part due to increased formation of malondialdehyde in HDL. Taken together, our data indicate that in patients with CAD, HDL gains endothelial LOX-1- and thereby PKCβII-activating properties due to reduced HDL-associated PON1 activity, and that this leads to inhibition of eNOS-activation and the subsequent loss of the endothelial antiinflammatory and endothelial repair-stimulating effects of HDL.


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