A protein of capillary endothelial cells, GPIHBP1, is crucial for plasma triglyceride metabolism

SG Young, W Song, Y Yang… - Proceedings of the …, 2022 - National Acad Sciences
SG Young, W Song, Y Yang, G Birrane, H Jiang, AP Beigneux, M Ploug, LG Fong
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2022National Acad Sciences
GPIHBP1, a protein of capillary endothelial cells (ECs), is a crucial partner for lipoprotein
lipase (LPL) in the lipolytic processing of triglyceride-rich lipoproteins. GPIHBP1, which
contains a three-fingered cysteine-rich LU (Ly6/uPAR) domain and an intrinsically
disordered acidic domain (AD), captures LPL from within the interstitial spaces (where it is
secreted by parenchymal cells) and shuttles it across ECs to the capillary lumen. Without
GPIHBP1, LPL remains stranded within the interstitial spaces, causing severe …
GPIHBP1, a protein of capillary endothelial cells (ECs), is a crucial partner for lipoprotein lipase (LPL) in the lipolytic processing of triglyceride-rich lipoproteins. GPIHBP1, which contains a three-fingered cysteine-rich LU (Ly6/uPAR) domain and an intrinsically disordered acidic domain (AD), captures LPL from within the interstitial spaces (where it is secreted by parenchymal cells) and shuttles it across ECs to the capillary lumen. Without GPIHBP1, LPL remains stranded within the interstitial spaces, causing severe hypertriglyceridemia (chylomicronemia). Biophysical studies revealed that GPIHBP1 stabilizes LPL structure and preserves LPL activity. That discovery was the key to crystallizing the GPIHBP1–LPL complex. The crystal structure revealed that GPIHBP1’s LU domain binds, largely by hydrophobic contacts, to LPL’s C-terminal lipid-binding domain and that the AD is positioned to project across and interact, by electrostatic forces, with a large basic patch spanning LPL’s lipid-binding and catalytic domains. We uncovered three functions for GPIHBP1’s AD. First, it accelerates the kinetics of LPL binding. Second, it preserves LPL activity by inhibiting unfolding of LPL’s catalytic domain. Third, by sheathing LPL’s basic patch, the AD makes it possible for LPL to move across ECs to the capillary lumen. Without the AD, GPIHBP1-bound LPL is trapped by persistent interactions between LPL and negatively charged heparan sulfate proteoglycans (HSPGs) on the abluminal surface of ECs. The AD interrupts the HSPG interactions, freeing LPL–GPIHBP1 complexes to move across ECs to the capillary lumen. GPIHBP1 is medically important; GPIHBP1 mutations cause lifelong chylomicronemia, and GPIHBP1 autoantibodies cause some acquired cases of chylomicronemia.
National Acad Sciences