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Vol. 12, No. 8, pp. 1189-1201, April 15, 1998
1 Institute for Arteriosclerosis Research and 2 Institute for Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine (Zentrallaboratorium), Westfalian Wilhelms-University, D-48129 Münster, Germany; 3 Department of Pediatrics, Academic Medical Center, University of Amsterdam, 1105 AZ Amsterdam, The Netherlands; 4 Center for Biomembranes and Lipid Enzymology, University of Utrecht, De Uithof, Utrecht, The Netherlands; 5 Department of Pathology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27599-7525 USA
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Abstract |
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Gene targeting in mice was used to investigate the unknown
function of Scp2, encoding sterol carrier protein-2 (SCP2; a
peroxisomal lipid carrier) and sterol carrier protein-x (SCPx; a fusion
protein between SCP2 and a peroxisomal thiolase). Complete deficiency of SCP2 and SCPx was associated with marked alterations in gene expression, peroxisome proliferation, hypolipidemia, impaired body
weight control, and neuropathy. Along with these abnormalities, catabolism of
methyl-branched fatty acyl CoAs was impaired. The defect became evident from
up to 10-fold accumulation of the tetramethyl-branched fatty acid phytanic
acid in Scp2(
/
) mice. Further characterization supported that the gene disruption led to inefficient import of phytanoyl-CoA into peroxisomes and to defective thiolytic cleavage of
3-ketopristanoyl-CoA. These results corresponded to high-affinity binding of phytanoyl-CoA to the recombinant rat SCP2 protein, as well as high
3-ketopristanoyl-CoA thiolase activity of the recombinant rat SCPx protein.
[Key Words:
Gene targeting; peroxisomes;
-oxidation; Refsum disease; cholesterol; steroid hormones]
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Introduction |
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Sterol carrier protein-2 (SCP2) was isolated originally as a
"cytosolic" factor required for efficient in vitro conversion of
7-dehydrocholesterol to cholesterol, catalyzed by microsomal sterol-
7-reductase (Noland et al.
1980
). Subsequently, it was shown that the protein
was identical to the nonspecific lipid transfer protein (ns-LTP), which
had been purified based on its ability to catalyze the exchange of a
variety of phospholipids between membranes in vitro (Bloj and
Zilversmit 1977
). More recently, it could be demonstrated that purified
SCP2 binds fatty acids and fatty acyl Coenzyme A (CoA) with similar or
even higher affinity than sterols (Stolowich et al. 1997
). Cloning and
sequencing of SCP2 cDNAs showed that the protein comprises a
carboxy-terminal SKL peroxisomal targeting signal (Seedorf and Assmann
1991
), and immunocytochemical studies confirmed the predominant
localization of SCP2 within peroxisomes (Keller et al. 1989
; Ossendorp
and Wirtz 1993
). Several lines of indirect evidence exist that appear
to support a role of SCP2 in adrenal and ovarian steroidogenesis (for
review, see Pfeifer et al. 1993a
). In addition, cell culture studies
suggested a potential participation of SCP2 in cytosolic sterol
transport to the plasma membrane (Puglielli et al. 1995
; Baum et al.
1997
). However, the localization of SCP2 in peroxisomes makes it
difficult to understand how the protein might carry out these functions
in the intact cell. Thus, the biological function of SCP2 is not clear.
The SCP2-encoding gene (Scp2) comprises 16 exons, spanning
~100 kb on human chromosome 1p32. Transcription initiation is
controlled by two distant promoters that were mapped immediately
upstream of the first exon (P1) and exon 12 (P2) (Ohba et al. 1994
,
1995
). P2 is used to generate SCP2-encoding transcripts, which combine the coding information provided by exons 12-16. In addition, alternate transcription initiation at P1 leads to production of a second transcript that includes the coding information provided by exons 1-16. The respective gene product consists of 547 amino acids and was
named sterol carrier protein-x (SCPx) (Seedorf and Assmann 1991
). SCPx
represents a fusion protein between a thiolase domain, extending from
amino acids 1-404, and SCP2, which is located at the carboxyl terminus
(Ossendorp et al. 1991
). It is known from previous in vitro studies
that SCPx has similar lipid transfer activity as SCP2 and that the
substrate specificity of the SCPx thiolase shows a preference for
straight medium chain acyl-CoA substrates and tetramethyl-branched
3-ketopristanoyl-CoA (Seedorf et al. 1994a
; Wanders et al. 1997
). Thus,
the SCPx-associated thiolase differs from the initially identified
peroxisomal thiolase that is assumed traditionally to play a major role
in peroxisomal
-oxidation of most naturally occurring substrates,
including bile acids and very long chain fatty-acids (VLCFA) (Hijikata
et al. 1987
; Schram et al. 1987
).
In the present study, we investigated the biological function of
Scp2 by using gene targeting in mice. The phenotypic
abnormalities of the Scp2(
/
) knockout
(KO) mice revealed a profound impact of the gene disruption on the in
vivo degradation of branched-chain fatty acyl-CoAs coming from the
metabolism of tetramethyl-branched fatty acid phytanic acid. On the
other hand, the serum concentrations of cholesterol, steroids, VLCFA,
and long-chain fatty acids were not affected in
Scp2(
/
) mice. This leads to our
conclusion that one principal function of Scp2 resides in the
major peroxisomal pathway, which mediates the degradation of
methyl-branched fatty acyl-CoA substrates in mice.
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Results |
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To produce SCP2 and SCPx deficiency, we introduced a gene disruption at the exon 14 region of the gene (Fig. 1A). Transfection of the targeting vector into mouse E14 ES cells and subsequent positive-negative selection provided 182 clones. Southern blot analysis led to the identification of two correctly targeted clones (cl20, cl110) with only a single neo gene copy in the targeted locus (Fig. 1B). Injection of recombinant cl110 embryonic stem cells in blastocysts obtained from C57BL/6 donors, followed by embryo transfer into CD1 foster mothers generated five chimeras. Among these, we identified three transmitters that were crossed further with C57BL/6 mice.
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Complete elimination of the Scp2 gene function was confirmed
by Northern blot experiments, showing a low-intensity signal derived
from a truncated Scp2 transcript in (
/
)
mice that was ~150 nucleotides smaller than the corresponding
transcript in normal C57BL/6 mice (Fig. 1C). When
primers, flanking the region of the Scp2 cDNA encoded by exon
14, were used for PCR amplification with reverse transcribed poly(A)
RNA, isolated from (
/
) mice, a DNA fragment was
obtained that again was ~150 bp smaller than normal. DNA sequencing
of this DNA fragment revealed that the Scp2 targeted allele
led to abnormal splicing resulting in exon 14 skipping (Fig. 1D). The
cDNA sequence predicted protein sequences of SCP2 and SCPx that were
normal until position 22 and 427, respectively. Thereafter, the direct
junction to the coding information of exon 15 resulted in a
frame-shift, thereby creating a premature stop 18 codons downstream.
Results from earlier site-directed mutagenesis studies lead to the
conclusion that the predicted SCP2 variant should clearly lack any
residual lipid transfer activity (Seedorf et al. 1994b
). In contrast,
the thiolase-like domain (residues 1-404) was preserved in the
predicted SCPx variant, which may suggest the possibility of residual
thiolase activity. However, because the carboxy-terminal peroxisomal
targeting signal is absent, the variant should no longer be imported
into peroxisomes and therefore, should be at least functionally
inactive. Moreover, as shown in Figure 1E, liver extracts subjected to
Western blot analyses developed with anti-SCP2 or anti-SCPx antibodies
revealed complete absence of the two proteins in (
/
)
mice. Homozygous transgenes also lacked the previously identified peroxisomal
44-kD thiolase-like peptide that was considered to result from proteolytic processing of SCPx (Seedorf et al. 1994a
).
Genotyping showed that heterozygous (+/
) and
homozygous (
/
) transgenes were viable. When kept
under standard laboratory conditions, (
/
) mice
developed normally and had no developmental abnormalities. We did not
observe differences in the incidence of (+/+),
(+/
), and (
/
) mice from the
Mendelian distribution [27% (+/+), 52%
(+/
), 21% (
/
),
n = 141] indicating that the (
/
) allele
did not affect the viability at 3-4 weeks of age. In addition,
(
/
) males and females reached fertility at the normal
age of ~6 weeks. Interbreeding between (
/
) males and (
/
) females gave rise to viable progeny. The litters
were of comparable sizes as that found in (+/+) or
(+/
) interbreeding. In 6- to 8-week-old males,
testosterone and glucocorticoid concentrations were within the normal
range. No differences between the two strains were also found for
progesterone in nonpregnant females under baseline conditions. Whereas
plasma insulin and cholesterol concentrations were normal, triglycerides were
slightly higher and free fatty acid and glucose concentrations were moderately
lower in (
/
) mice (Table 1).
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All major tissues of the Scp2(
/
) mice
were examined by light microscopy at various times after birth and
compared with those of heterozygous and wild-type mice. Although the
organ systems appeared morphologically normal, we observed more intense
diaminobenzidine staining (DAB, stains specifically peroxisomes) in
frozen liver sections from Scp2(
/
) mice
than from controls (Fig. 2A). Enzyme activity levels
of the peroxisomal marker catalase were 1.8-fold elevated in
Scp2(
/
) liver. Likewise, peroxisomal
palmitoyl-CoA oxidase (ACO), mitochondrial butyryl-CoA dehydrogenase,
and total 3-ketooctanoyl-CoA thiolase activities were all two- to
threefold higher in Scp2(
/
) mice than in
controls (Fig. 2B). Whereas the hepatic levels of phospholipids were
normal, cholesterol ester and triglyceride storage pools were markedly
depleted in livers from Scp2(
/
) mice
(Table 1). Intestinal lipid absorption was normal, as judged by monitoring
intestinal uptake of radiolabeled cholesterol or palmitic acid. We also did
not detect abnormal liver function, as indicated by normal GOT, GPT,
GT,
and bilirubin serum levels (data not shown). Age- and sex-matched
Scp2(
/
) and C57BL/6 mice had
similar body weights, whereas food intake was significantly higher in
Scp2(
/
) mice (256 ± 12.9 mg/day × grams of body weight) compared with controls (196 ± 10.7 mg/day × grams of body weight).
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In addition to these biochemical abnormalities, the Scp2 gene
disruption had marked effects on hepatic gene expression. As shown in
Figure 3, Scp2(
/
) mice showed increased
expression of liver fatty acid-binding protein (L-FABP, fourfold),
peroxisomal 3-ketoacyl-CoA thiolase (pTHIOL, three- to fourfold),
mitochondrial 3-ketoacyl-CoA thiolase (mTHIOL, two- to threefold), ACO
(twofold), and cholesterol-7
-hydroxylase (CYP7
, fourfold). In
contrast, no effect was observed on the level of GAPDH,
-actin,
and sterol-27-hydroxylase (CYP27) expression, whereas
phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (PEPCK) expression was down-regulated
in the Scp2(
/
) group, which corresponded
to mild hypoglycemia in that group (Fig. 3, Table 1).
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Whereas we did not detect significant differences regarding the
relative levels of the straight long chain saturated, monounsaturated, polyunsaturated, or VLCFAs (data not shown), phytanic acid was close to
10-fold elevated in (
/
) mice compared with
controls (Table 2). Phytanic acid is a
tetramethyl-branched fatty acid that is produced in heterotrophic
organisms from plant-derived phytol (an isoprenoic alcohol esterified
to ring IV of chlorophyll). Because neither phytanic acid nor phytol
are synthesized de novo in mammals, phytanic acid serum concentrations
depend on dietary intake of preformed phytanic acid or its precursor
phytol, storage of phytanic acid in cellular neutral lipids, and the
catabolic rate of phytanic acid (Steinberg 1995
). Because only low
amounts of free phytol (75 µg/gram) and phytanic acid
(200 µg/gram) were present in the normal laboratory
diet, we performed feeding experiments with semisynthetic diets
supplemented with phytol. When Scp2(
/
) mice were exposed to a diet containing 5 mg/g of phytol
for 7 days, the levels in serum of phytanic acid increased from 16 to 1163 µmoles/liter, whereas in
Scp2(+/+) mice, it increased from 1.4 to 129 µmoles/liter (Table 2). Likewise, when we used a more natural high-fat diet (containing 15% coconut butter, which is a rich natural
source of phytanic acid and phytol), phytanic acid plasma levels were more
than tenfold higher in Scp2(
/
) mice compared
with controls. In addition, elevated phytanic acid concentrations were also
detected in sera from heterozygotes (Table 2).
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We then exposed male mice of the two strains to phytol-enriched diets
for 4 days, followed by a period of 10 days in which they were fed the
standard low-phytol diet. In (+/+) mice, dietary intake of the phytol-enriched food induced an increase in serum phytanic acid concentrations up to 69 µmoles/liter
(Fig. 4). After the diet change, the concentrations
declined to 1.5 µmoles/liter within 2 days. In
(
/
) mice phytanic acid reached a maximum of 354 µmoles/liter and declined to 36 µmoles/liter at day 10. Thereafter, phytanic acid
continued to decline slowly, reaching 18 µmoles/liter at the end of the experiment. In contrast to (+/+)
mice, who revealed a close to twofold transient increase with respect
to liver catalase activities, the values remained close to twofold above
normal in (
/
) mice throughout the experiment (Fig. 4).
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Catabolism of phytanic acid proceeds by way of
-oxidation,
yielding the (n
1) lower homolog pristanic acid
(C19:0), which is further catabolized by way of
-oxidation in
peroxisomes (Singh et al. 1994
; Singh and Poulos 1995
; Steinberg 1995
). To
discriminate between defective phytanoyl-CoA
-oxidation and pristanoyl-CoA
-oxidation, we then quantified pristanic acid. However, pristanic
acid could not be detected in sera from
Scp2(+/+),
Scp2(+/
), or
Scp2(
/
) mice under normal conditions.
Only after phytol enrichment of the diet, pristanic acid concentrations
were two- to threefold higher in Scp2(
/
)
mice than in the two other strains (Table 2). To investigate the block
in phytol catabolism more specifically, we continued to analyze phytol
metabolites in saponified liver lipid extracts by time-of-flight
secondary-ion-mass-spectrometry (TOF-SIMS) (Fig. 5A).
This method enabled us to detect a wider range of metabolites than
could be identified by gas chromatography. Evaluation of the signal
intensities of the relevant ions indicated accumulation of phytanic
acid (six- to eightfold),
2,3-pristenic acid (four- to fivefold),
3-OH-pristanic acid (three- to fourfold), and pristanic acid (twofold)
in (
/
) liver (Fig. 5C). Because model analyses
with 3-ketoacyl acids indicated that they were not stable during the
analysis (data not shown), 3-ketopristanic acid could not be measured
directly. However, we looked for the product of the thiolytic cleavage
of 3-ketopristanoyl-CoA, detected at 255.3 mu (corresponding to the
[M-H+]
ion of 4,8,12-trimethyltridecanoic acid; TMTDA). As
expected for deficient thiolytic cleavage of 3-ketopristanoyl-CoA, the respective signal was found 70% repressed in
Scp2(
/
) mice (Fig. 5B,C). Likewise, the
signal of the next predicted downstream metabolite, 4,8,12-trimethyl-
2,3-tridecenoic acid (
2,3-TMTDA), was also close to threefold higher in controls than in the transgenic strain (Fig. 5B,C). In contrast, signals expected for phytol (detected as a
negative ion at 293.5 mu) were barely detectable in all samples, suggesting that conversion of phytol to phytanic acid occurred with
high efficiency in both strains of mice.
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These data support the concept that phytol degradation is inhibited at
a step downstream of phytanoyl-CoA
-oxidation. They are also in
line with recent findings by Wanders et al. (1997)
that purified
recombinant rat SCPx protein exhibits high 3-keto-pristanoyl-CoA thiolase activity. On the other hand, the large accumulation of phytanic acid, which exceeded that of pristanic acid under these experimental conditions, pointed to a partial block also at an early
step of phytanic acid breakdown. Because expression of phytanoyl-CoA hydroxylase was not down-regulated in
Scp2(
/
) mice (Fig. 6A), we hypothesized
that SCP2 could function as an auxiliary factor in phytanic acid
oxidation (i.e., by acting as a peroxisomal binding protein or
substrate carrier). To evaluate this possibility, we determined binding affinities of phytanic acid, pristanic acid, phytanoyl-CoA, pristanoyl-CoA, and cholesterol of recombinant rat SCP2.
We used a fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) competition
assay. In this assay, competitive inhibition of the binding of
pyrenyl-dodecanoic acid to recombinant SCP2 by the nonlabeled
substrates was monitored using FRET between the single tryptophan
residue of SCP2 (donor) and the pyrene acceptor of the labeled fatty
acid. The results showed that the recombinant SCP2 protein had a high
affinity for phytanoyl-CoA binding (Kd, 250 nM), whereas the affinities for binding of pristanoyl-CoA, pristanic acid, and phytanic acid were considerably lower (Fig. 6B). In
addition, we found that the affinity of the interaction between
phytanoyl-CoA and SCP2 was severalfold higher than that of cholesterol
(which led to the traditional name sterol carrier protein) (Fig. 6B).
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Diets containing up to 2.5 mg/gram of phytol were
tolerated rather well in Scp2(
/
) mice.
Although body weights declined slowly by up to 25% within 6 weeks, we
noticed no signs of toxicity. Apart from their skinny appearance,
Scp2(
/
) mice looked healthy, they
remained active, had no signs of neurological abnormalities, and
dietary intake was high until the end of the experiment at 6 weeks.
Mobilization of body mass was maximal within the first few days and
occurred in the absence of significant differences in food intake (Fig.
7A). In parallel,
Scp2(
/
) mice developed more pronounced
hypolipidemia than controls (Fig. 7B). Higher phytol enrichment of the
diet (5 mg/gram) led to much more severe abnormalities.
Already beginning with the first day, (
/
) mice lost body weight extensively, which declined rapidly until they reached
close to 60% of their starting weights at the end of the second week
(Fig. 7A), when we noticed an unhealthy appearance, inactivity, reduced
muscle tone, ataxia, and peripheral neuropathy (uncoordinated
movements, unsteady gait, and trembling). Already after 1 week,
Scp2(
/
) mice showed pronounced decreases
of lipid and glucose levels in serum and almost complete absence of fat tissue (Fig. 7C). The values obtained in serum for GPT, GOT, and alkaline phosphatase were severalfold elevated and liver histology indicated pronounced liver disease. All
Scp2(
/
) mice died in the third week,
presumably because the extensive neurological disturbances
progressively disabled their food intake. In contrast, controls
tolerated both diets well until the end of the experiment (6 weeks).
When 5 mg/gram of phytol were added to the diet, we observed only a moderate decrease in body weight (
15%), mild hypolipidemia, and hypoglycemia, and moderately elevated serum GPT
levels without morphological signs of liver disease or reduced food
intake. In contrast, supplementation of the diet with >50 mg of
phytol per gram of food led to a similar range of abnormalities and
premature death in controls, as could be observed with 5 mg/gram in the transgenic strain (data not shown).
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Discussion |
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In the present study, we used gene targeting to investigate the
function of Scp2 in mice. We were interested in this approach because there is no human inherited disease known that results from
Scp2 mutations and the great manifold of in vitro studies, which were performed during the past two decades, have not led to a
convincing functional conclusion. Because the defective allele contained only one correctly targeted neo gene and the
recombinant genetic abnormality based on a specific molecular
mechanism, associated with exon 14 skipping and thus abnormal splicing
of Scp2 transcripts, it is highly unlikely that the
abnormalities are attributable to a linked or incidental genetic defect
rather than to the Scp2 gene disruption itself. Moreover, also
heterozygous mice had elevated phytanic acid concentrations, indicating
that this intermediate quantitative phenotype depended on the gene
dosage. Although the gene disruption did not completely eliminate
synthesis of Scp2 transcripts, the abnormal RNAs were barely
detectable and encode truncated SCP2 and SCPx peptides that should be
functionally inactive and were not detected in
Scp2(
/
) mice. We conclude that the targeted allele is associated with complete SCP2 and SCPx deficiency and thus, behaves like a null allele.
We believe our data demonstrate convincingly that abnormal phytol
catabolism is a primary effect of the gene disruption. Phytol is a
natural tetramethyl-branched acyl alcohol, originating from the
isoprenoic side chain esterified to ring IV of chlorophyll. In humans,
the daily dietary intake of phytol and its product phytanic acid is in
the order of 100 mg/day, but intake varies greatly
depending on dietary habits (Steinberg 1995
). As illustrated in Figure
8, normal catabolism starts with the conversion of phytol to phytanic
acid, followed by activation to phytanoyl-CoA in the cytoplasm. Phytanoyl-CoA is then imported into
peroxisomes followed by
-oxidation, which involves hydroxylation
at the
-carbon position by phytanoyl-CoA hydroxylase (PHYH).
Subsequently, 2-OH-phytanoyl-CoA is converted to pristanic acid and
formyl-CoA (Wanders et al. 1994
; Croes et al. 1997
). Whereas formyl-CoA
is further catabolized in mitochondria, pristanic acid is activated
to pristanoyl-CoA, which is then subject to six cycles of
peroxisomal
-oxidation. The intermediates of the first cycle are
2,3-pristenoyl-CoA (produced by pristanoyl-CoA oxidase),
3-OH-pristanoyl-CoA, and 3-ketopristanoyl-CoA (produced by a
peroxisomal bifunctional enzyme). Finally, 3-ketopristanoyl-CoA is
substrate for thiolytic cleavage, catalyzed by a 3-ketopristanoyl-CoA thiolase, which yields the (n-3) lower homolog of pristanoyl-CoA (4,8,12-trimethyltridecanoyl-CoA) and propionyl-CoA (for review, see
Steinberg 1995
). Although studies on mice are not available, it now
appears that this pathway operates in a similar way in rats and humans
(Watkins et al. 1994
; Singh and Poulos 1995
).
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We detected pronounced accumulation of phytanic acid in
Scp2(
/
) mice, which exceeded that of
pristanic acid and the downstream catabolic intermediates by
severalfold. This may be explained by inhibition of initial phytanic
acid activation, phytanoyl-CoA import into peroxisomes, or
phytanoyl-CoA
-hydroxylation. Abnormal activation was unlikely
because recent studies demonstrated convincingly that phytanoyl-CoA
ligation is mediated by a common long chain fatty acyl-CoA ligase
(Watkins et al. 1996
), whereas metabolism of long straight chain fatty
acids was apparently not affected by the gene disruption. Because
PHYH was expressed normally in Scp2(
/
) mice, we also excluded secondary
down-regulation of PHYH expression. On the basis of these
considerations, we hypothesized that the lipid carrier function of SCP2
may be involved in peroxisomal phytanoyl-CoA uptake (i.e., by acting as
phytanoyl-CoA binding protein). The analysis, which was performed with
a very specific FRET competition assay on the purified recombinant rat
protein, revealed a much higher affinity for binding of phytanoyl-CoA
than of pristanoyl-CoA, phytanic acid, pristanic acid, or cholesterol. In addition, the Kd value was within a
physiologically meaningful range (250 nM), thus supporting
the postulated indirect role of SCP2 in peroxisomal phytanoyl-CoA uptake.
Impaired phytanoyl-CoA import into peroxisomes would lead to the
expectation that the production of downstream intermediates, which are
generated in peroxisomes from phytanoyl-CoA, should be repressed in
Scp2(
/
) mice. In contrast, evaluation of
TOF-SIMS signals, which corresponded to these intermediates, indicated even higher concentrations than in controls after challenging mice with
high dosages of dietary phytol. Although the twofold increase in
pristanic acid did not reach statistical significance, accumulation of
2,3-pristenic acid (four- to fivefold) and 3-OH-pristanic acid
(three- to fourfold) was highly significant. In contrast, 3-ketopristanic acid was not stable enough to withstand alkaline extraction and subsequent TOF-SIMS or GC-MS analyses. We could, however, detect a very significant 70% repression of the signals produced by the downstream products of the 3-ketopristanoyl-CoA thiolase reaction in Scp2(
/
) mice
(4,8,12-trimethyltridecanoic acid and
4,8,12-trimethyl-
2,3-tridecenoic acid). Together with enrichment
of upstream intermediates in pristanic acid
-oxidation, the latter
result supported very clearly inhibition at the level of
3-ketopristanoyl-CoA cleavage. These in vivo data corresponded to
recent studies, which demonstrated high specific activity of recombinant rat SCPx to catalyze the thiolytic cleavage of
3-ketopristanoyl-CoA in vitro (Wanders et al. 1997
). Thus, our data
appear to indicate a dual effect of the gene disruption,
consisting of reduced peroxisomal phytanoylCoA import
combined with defective thiolytic cleavage of 3-ketopristanoyl-CoA.
Whereas the first effect seems to relate to the phytanoyl-CoA carrier
function of SCP2, the second may reflect the enzymatic activity
associated with SCPx. This hypothesis appears very compelling, because
it may clarify why evolution has established a molecular basis for
coexpression of the two Scp2-encoded functions by fusing two
originally separated SCP2 and thiolase genes into one common
transcriptional unit. The fused gene is present in all vertebrates and
could be traced back to Drosophila melanogaster (GenBank
accession no. X97685). In contrast, two separated genes were identified
in Caenorhabditis elegans and several yeast species (Pfeifer
et al. 1993b
; Bunya et al. 1997
). Interestingly, an ancient precursor
of SCP2 could be identified even in the primitive methanogenic archaeon
Methanococcus jannaschii (Bult et al. 1996
), in whom
methyl-branched fatty acids play a prominent role.
As expected, (
/
) mice revealed a higher increase
of phytanic acid concentrations than controls, when we challenged the
two strains of mice transiently with phytol-enriched diets. However, after switching to the low phytol diet,
Scp2(
/
) mice eliminated phytanic acid
from the bloodstream at a surprisingly high initial rate, followed by a
much slower decline after 6 days. Because it is known from studies on
patients with Refsum disease that excess phytanic acid can be taken up
by cells and stored in triglycerides (Steinberg 1995
), the high initial
rate most likely reflected cellular uptake and storage rather than high
residual activity for phytanic acid breakdown. On the basis of the slow
rate of the late decline, we calculated this activity to ~10%. This
was in line with our other findings
10-fold higher steady-state
concentrations of phytanic acid and ~10-fold increased phytol
toxicity. However, whether the residual activity is attributable to
compensatory up-regulation of peroxisomal straight chain
-oxidation, the presence in our model of the SCP2-like activity
associated with the 80-kD precursor of 17
-hydroxysteroid
dehydrogenase type IV (Leenders et al. 1996
), or an alternative pathway
for phytanic acid oxidation, cannot be decided from our data.
Baum et al. (1997)
reported that overexpression of SCP2 in rat hepatoma
cells inhibited cholesterol esterification and HDL secretion, whereas
plasma membrane cholesterol was significantly increased. In addition,
Puglielli et al. (1995)
showed that treatment of human skin fibroblasts
with SCP2 anti-sense oligonucleotides led to inhibition of cholesterol
net transfer to the plasma membrane. In view of these results, we found
it surprising that Scp2(
/
) mice had
significantly lower hepatic cholesterol ester storage than controls.
Because the gene disruption also lowered free fatty acid and
triglyceride concentrations very effectively, our results seem to
indicate decreased availability of fatty acids for intracellular lipid
esterification rather than a specific abnormality in cytosolic free
cholesterol trafficking. It appeared interesting to us that hepatic
hypolipidemia was associated with peroxisome proliferation and
induction of peroxisomal and mitochondrial fatty acid
-oxidation in Scp2(
/
) mice. As is known from
treatment of rodents with fibrates, induction of
-oxidation and
peroxisome proliferation can lead to fatty acid hypermetabolism and
hypolipidemia (for review, see Lemberger et al. 1996
). The signals
mediating peroxisome proliferation and modulation of gene expression in
Scp2(
/
) mice are currently unknown. One
possibility consists of a direct or indirect effect of accumulating
phytol metabolites on nuclear signal transduction pathways (i.e., the
peroxisome proliferator activated receptor PPAR
being the most
likely candidate in this respect).
Earlier studies provided several lines of indirect evidence that appear
to support a role for SCP2 in adrenal and ovarian steroidogenesis
(Pfeifer et al. 1993a
). SCP2 is abundant in steroidogenic glands and
trophic hormones stimulate steroidogenesis along with SCP2 gene
expression (Trzeciak et al. 1987
; Rennert et al. 1991
). In addition,
SCP2 enhanced the movement of cholesterol between vesicles and isolated
mitochondria in vitro, which corresponded to increased pregnenolone
synthesis in the in vitro system (Chanderbhan et al. 1982
; Xu et al.
1991
). Moreover, overexpression of SCP2 in COS cells engineered to
produce progestins increased steroid formation (Yamamoto et al. 1991
).
On the other hand, no correlation existed between SCP2 expression and
side chain cleavage activity in a variety of human tissue specimen
(Yanase et al. 1996
) and, a priori, it is not very clear how a
peroxisomal protein would stimulate the net transfer of free
cholesterol to mitochondria directly. So far, the phenotypic
characterization of the Scp2(
/
) mouse
has not provided any convincing evidence for a role of SCP2 in
steroidogenesis in vivo. The absence of developmental abnormalities or
salt wasting and the fact that (
/
) mice had no
abnormalities affecting fertility, seemed to exclude an obligatory role
of SCP2 in general steroidogenesis. This was in line with normal
adrenal morphology and normal plasma concentrations of testosterone,
progesterone, and glucocorticoids. On the other hand, a more subtle
defect may be masked by compensatory mechanisms or depend on
appropriate stress conditions.
In summary, the current phenotypic characterization of the
Scp2(
/
) KO mouse model did not provide
immediate convincing evidence for an obligatory role of this gene in
intracellular cholesterol trafficking. Instead, our data indicate that
the two gene products SCP2 and SCPx cooperate in peroxisomal oxidation
of certain naturally occurring tetramethyl-branched fatty acyl-CoAs in
mice. Thus, the Scp2 gene is somewhat reminiscent of a
bacterial operon, in which distinct functions that act in the same
metabolic pathway are combined in a common transcriptional unit. This
role is consistent with its genetic organization, the well-established
peroxisomal localization of SCP2 and SCPx (Keller et al. 1989
;
Ossendorp and Wirtz 1993
), the ability of SCP2 to bind phytanoyl-CoA in
vitro, high 3-ketopristanoyl-CoA thiolase activity of the SCPx protein (Wanders et al. 1997
), and the expression pattern that correlates with
lipid uptake of cells and thus phytanic acid exposition (Ossendorp et
al. 1991
; Seedorf and Assmann 1991
; Yamamoto et al. 1991
; Hirai et al.
1994
; McLean et al. 1995
).
| |
Materials and methods |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Construction of the targeting vector
Scp2 genomic sequences were isolated from a
-Fix
mouse genomic library (provided by Stratagene, Heidelberg, Germany)
made of leukocyte DNA from mouse strain 129/SV. The basic
fragment of the targeting construct was a 7.7-kb genomic EcoRI
fragment containing exon 14 as the only Scp2 coding sequences.
Because exon 14 did not contain an appropriate restriction site, a
1.8-kb HindIII-SpeI fragment including the exon and
flanking intron sequences was first subcloned in pBluescript SK
and
a SalI site was introduced into exon 14 by PCR-mediated
site-directed mutagenesis (wild-type sequence, 5'-GTGAAG; mutated
sequence, 5'-GTCGACG). The mutated fragment was reintroduced into
the original 7.7-kb EcoRI fragment and this fragment was then
cloned in the EcoRI site of a modified pBluescript vector
(lacking the restriction sites HindII, HindIII,
SalI, EcoRV, and SpeI from its multicloning site). Double digestion of this vector with SalI and
SpeI released a 250-bp DNA fragment containing 110 bp of the
exon 14 3'-part and 140 bp of flanking intron 14 sequences. After
treatment with Klenow enzyme, the 1.2-kb XhoI-HindII
fragment containing the neo gene cassette from the vector
pMC1neoPoly(A) was blunt-end cloned into the double digested
vector, thereby replacing the exon 14-intron 14 region of the
Scp2 gene by the neo gene cassette. The 8.7-kb
NotI-KpnI fragment from the resulting vector was
cloned into the vector pPNT that was linearized by NotI
digestion and used for transfection of ES cells.
Culturing and electroporation of ES cells
Experiments were carried out with the strain
129/Ola-derived ES cell line E14 (Hooper et al. 1987
)
provided by N. Maeda (University of North Carolina). The cells were
cultured on G418-resistant mouse embryonic fibroblast feeder layers as
described earlier (Zhang et al. 1992
). ES cells (3 × 107
cells) were resuspended in 0.5 ml of PBS containing 25 µg of linearized targeting vector and electroporated for 1 sec with a Bio-Rad
GenePulser at 200 µF and 300 V per 0.4 cm. Cells were then seeded
on eight Petri dishes (diameter, 10 cm) coated with fibroblast feeder
layers. Selection with G418 (200 µg/ml, GIBCO) was
started after 1 day and selection with gancyclovir (2 µM) after 2 days. After 12 days of growth, individual colonies were picked.
Each colony was scraped from the plate with a sterile glass capillary
and transferred to a 24-multiwell plate coated with fibroblast feeder
layers and containing 1 ml of growth medium supplemented with 200 µg/ml G418, 2 µM Gancyclovir, and 100 U/ml of penicillin and streptomycin. After 2 days, each
colony was disrupted with trypsin [0.025% wt/vol].
Four to 8 days later, the cells were trypsinized again and ~90 % of
the cells were removed for DNA isolation. The remaining cells were
transferred into new coated multiwell plates and after the cells were
grown to a final density of 1.5 × 106 to
2.5 × 106 cells per well, they were frozen in growth
medium containing 10% dimethylsulfoxide.
DNA analysis of ES cells and mice
Cells were lysed in 200 µl of 1% SDS, 25 µg of
proteinase K per milliliter for 12-16 hr at 55°C. Thereafter, 100 µl of saturated NaCl was added, mixed, and centrifuged in an
Eppendorf benchtop centrifuge at maximal speed for 15 min. The DNA was
ethanol precipitated from the supernatant and dissolved in 25 µl of
Tris-EDTA buffer (TE). Eight microliters of this solution was digested
with the appropriate restriction enzyme, fractionated in 0.8% agarose
gels and transferred to nitrocellulose (0.1-µm pore size;
Schleicher & Schuell). Hybridization was performed as described (Raabe
et al. 1996
) with final washes in 0.1× SSC, 0.1%
(wt/vol) SDS at 65°C for 30 min. DNA for genotype analysis
was isolated from mouse tail tips as described by Laird et al. (1991)
.
RNA and Western blot analyses, PCR, and DNA sequencing
Total RNA was isolated from mouse tissues with the
guandinium-thiocyanate-phenol-chloroform extraction procedure
(Chomczynski and Sacchi 1987
) followed by selection of poly(A)
RNA on oligo(dT) cellulose. Northern blots were hybridized with
digoxigenin-labeled probes prepared by random priming using a
commercially available kit (Boehringer, Mannheim, Germany). All probes
were obtained from a mouse liver cDNA library by PCR amplification with
appropriate primers. Quantification was carried out relative to
expression of GAPDH, detected with a probe derived from a 1.3-kb
PstI fragment from pGAPDH (Fort et al. 1985
) containing rat
glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase cDNA, the probe for detection
of Scp2 expression was a 0.45-kb PstI fragment from
pBS-mSCPx containing mouse sterol carrier protein X cDNA (Seedorf et
al. 1993
). The membranes were rinsed twice in 0.1% SDS, 2× SSC at
room temperature and then twice in 1% SDS, 0.5× SSC at 68°C for
15 min. Bands were visualized using the chemiluminescence substrate
CDP-Star (Tropix-Serva, Heidelberg, Germany). DNA sequencing was
performed on an automated laser fluorescence DNA sequencer (Pharmacia,
Upsala, Sweden) according to the instruction manual of the supplier.
Detection of SCP2-related peptides by Western blot analysis was
described earlier (Seedorf et al. 1994a
).
Dietary intervention studies, and histological and anatomical analyses
In most experiments, 6- to 24-week-old male mice were used.
However, the defect in phytol catabolism was confirmed to be present also in a group of 25 female mice. Mice were fed a standard chow diet
[(Altrumin, Hanover, Germany) containing 0.8 mg/gram
(wt/wt) of various sterols, mainly cholesterol and
-sitosterol, 0.075 mg/gram (wt/wt) of
nonesterified phytol and 0.2 mg/gram
(wt/wt) of phytanic acid] and water of pH 3.4-3.6 ad
libitum. The high fat diet consisted of standard chow supplemented with
1% cholesterol, 15% coconut butter, and 0.5% cholate.
Phytol-enriched diets were prepared from these diets by adding 1-50
mg/gram (wt/wt) of phytol (Aldrich, St.
Louis, MO). Animals were kept individually, and food intake and body
weights were monitored daily. Tissues were dissected routinely between
9 and 10 a.m. (to exclude variations that might be attributable to
circadian regulation) after lethal anesthesia with avertin (Sigma).
Tissues were fixed in phosphate-buffered formaldehyde (pH 7.2) embedded
in paraffin, sectioned at 5 µm, and stained with appropriate stains.
Binding of fatty acids to SCP2
Binding constants for the interaction between recombinant rat SCP2 and phytanic acid, phytanoyl-CoA, pristanic acid, or pristanoyl-CoA were determined by competing bound pyrene-labeled dodecanoic acid with the nonlabeled substrates. Binding of pyrenyl-dodecanoic acid was monitored using FRET between the single tryptophan residue of SCP2 (donor) and the pyrene acceptor of the labeled fatty acid. The signals were corrected for direct excitation of pyrene at 280 nm. The competitor-induced decrease in sensitized emission was fitted to a binding equation derived from the rate equations of the relevant bimolar binding reactions.
Analytical techniques, serum chemistry, and statistical analyses
Serum samples were taken by orbital bleeding or heart puncture.
Serum chemistry was performed by routine clinical tests on a Hitachi
747 analyzer with sample volumes of 0.15 ml. Hormones were measured
using commercially available radioimmunoassay kits (Diagnostic Products
Corp., Los Angeles, CA). Fatty acids and phytanic and pristanic acid in
serum were measured by gas chromatography. Identification was achieved
with appropriate standards and verified by mass spectrometry as
described earlier. Analyses in the liver of phytol metabolites were
performed by TOF-SIMS as described earlier (Seedorf et al. 1995
). All
measurements were performed at least in triplicates. Statistical
analyses were performed with the paired t-test. Values of
P
0.05 were considered statistically significant.
| |
Acknowledgments |
|---|
We thank B. Glass, K. Kluckman, and D. Lee for expert technical assistance. Dr. R. Voss assisted in standardizing TOF-SIMS-based metabolite quantitation. This work was supported by grants from the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (Se 459/2-2), the Interdisziplinäres Klinisches Forschungszentrum (Project A4) of the Medical Faculty, University of Münster, the Boehringer Ingelheim Stiftung, Bristol Myers Squibb, and the Bayer AG.
The publication costs of this article were defrayed in part by payment of page charges. This article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 USC section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
| |
Footnotes |
|---|
Received December 10, 1997; revised version accepted February 9, 1998.
6 Corresponding author.
7 This study contains part of a thesis work performed in partial fulfillment of the requirements of the Westfalian Wilhelms-University, Münster, Germany.
E-MAIL seedorf{at}ear002.uni-muenster.de; FAX 49-251-8356208.
| |
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