Naked Mole‐Rat, a Rodent with an Apolipoprotein A‐I Dimer

2020 
A variety of rodents have been used as experimental animals in metabolic studies of plasma lipids and lipoproteins. These studies have included understanding the functional role of apolipoprotein A-I, the major protein on the surface of HDL. Reviewing the genomic database for entries for rodent apoA-I genes, it was discovered that the naked mole-rat (Heterocephalus glaber) gene encoded a protein with a cysteine at residue 28. Previously, two cases have been reported in which human heterozygotes had apoA-I with cysteine at residues 173 (apoA-I Milano) or at 151 (apoA-I Paris). Interestingly, both groups, in spite of having low levels of HDL and moderately elevated plasma triacylglycerols, had no evidence of cardiovascular disease. Moreover, the presence of the cysteine enabled the apoA-I to form both homodimers and heterodimers. Prior to this report, no other mammalian apoA-I has been found with a cysteine in its sequence. In addition, the encoded naked mole-rat protein had different amino acids at sites that were conserved in all other mammals. These differences resulted in naked mole-rat apoA-I having an unexpected neutral pI value, whereas other mammalian apoA-I have negative pI values. To verify these sequence differences and to determine if the N-terminal location of C28 precluded dimer formation, we conducted mass spectrometry analyses of apoA-I and other proteins associated with HDL. Consistent with the genomic data, our analyses confirmed the presence of C28 and the formation of a homodimer. Analysis of plasma lipids surprisingly revealed a profile similar to the human heterozygotes.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    35
    References
    2
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []