posted on 2013-10-15, 00:00authored bySu Xu, Anthony Jay, Kellen Brunaldi, Nasi Huang, James A. Hamilton
CD36 is a multifunctional protein
that enhances cellular fatty
acid (FA) uptake, a key step in energy metabolism, and its dysregulation
in multiple tissue sites is central to obesity-linked diabetes, a
risk factor for atherosclerosis. Although CD36 has been implicated
in FA uptake in a correlative way, the molecular mechanisms are not
known. Their elucidation in cells is confounded by receptor-mediated
uptake of low-density lipoprotein by CD36 and the competitive and/or
contributive effects of other proteins involved in FA transport and
metabolism, which include caveolin(s), fatty acid transport protein
(FATP), intracellular fatty acid binding protein, and enzymes involved
in the conversion of FAs to esters. Here we utilized a simpler cellular
system (HEK cells), which lack caveolin-1, CD36, and FATP and metabolize
FAs slowly compared to the time frame of transmembrane FA movement.
Our previous studies of HEK cells showed that caveolin-1 affects FA
binding and translocation across the plasma membrane and but not FA
esterification [Simard, J. R., et al. (2010) J. Lipid Res.
51 (5), 914–922]. Our key new finding is that CD36
accelerates FA uptake and extensive incorporation into triglycerides,
a process that is slower (minutes) than transmembrane movement (seconds).
Real-time fluorescence measurements showed that the rates of binding
and transport of oleic acid into cells with and without CD36 were
not different. Thus, CD36 enhances intracellular metabolism, i.e.,
esterification, and thereby increases the rate of FA uptake without
catalyzing the translocation of FA across the plasma membrane, suggesting
that CD36 is central to FA uptake via its effects on intracellular
metabolism.