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Infection and Immunity, May 2000, p. 2410-2417, Vol. 68, No. 5
0019-9567/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Lipopolysaccharide-Binding Protein and Phospholipid
Transfer Protein Release Lipopolysaccharides from Gram-Negative
Bacterial Membranes
C. J.
Vesy,1
R. L.
Kitchens,2
G.
Wolfbauer,3
J. J.
Albers,3 and
R.
S.
Munford2,4,*
Division of Digestive and Liver
Disease1 and Infectious Disease
Division,2 Department of Internal Medicine, and
Department of Microbiology,4 UT
Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, Texas 75235-9113, and
Department of Medicine and Northwest Lipid Research
Laboratories, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington
98103-91033
Received 2 September 1999/Returned for modification 9 November
1999/Accepted 18 January 2000
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ABSTRACT |
Although animals mobilize their innate defenses against
gram-negative bacteria when they sense the lipid A moiety of bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS), excessive responses to this conserved bacterial molecule can be harmful. Of the known ways for decreasing the
stimulatory potency of LPS in blood, the binding and neutralization of
LPS by plasma lipoproteins is most prominent. The mechanisms by which
host lipoproteins take up the native LPS that is found in bacterial
membranes are poorly understood, however, since almost all studies of
host-LPS interactions have used purified LPS aggregates. Using native
Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium outer membrane fragments (blebs) that contained 3H-labeled
lipopolysaccharide (LPS) and 35S-labeled protein, we found
that two human plasma proteins, LPS-binding protein (LBP) and
phospholipid transfer protein (PLTP), can extract [3H]LPS
from bacterial membranes and transfer it to human high-density lipoproteins (HDL). Soluble CD14 (sCD14) did not release LPS from blebs
yet could facilitate LBP-mediated LPS transfer to HDL. LBP, but not
PLTP, also promoted the activation of human monocytes by bleb-derived
LPS. Whereas depleting or neutralizing LBP significantly reduced LPS
transfer from blebs to lipoproteins in normal human serum, neutralizing
serum PLTP had no demonstrable effect. Of the known lipid transfer
proteins, LBP is thus most able to transfer LPS from bacterial
membranes to the lipoproteins in normal human serum.
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INTRODUCTION |
Lipopolysaccharide (LPS) recognition
by higher animals involves soluble proteins (LPS-binding protein
[LBP] and soluble CD14 [sCD14]) (15, 18, 43), membrane
receptors (CD14 and Toll-like receptor 4 [TLR4]) (40, 50),
and an intracellular signal amplification machinery that rapidly
generates and secretes a broad array of response mediators. LBP
promotes rapid binding of purified LPS from aggregates to
membrane-bound CD14 (mCD14) on cells or to sCD14 in plasma. CD14 is
important for confering sensitive cellular responses to LPS
(21), and TLR4 appears to be the most important LPS signal
transducer (22, 40). Although many details remain to be
discovered, much is now known about each of the steps in the LPS-based
antibacterial inflammatory response.
Considerably less is understood about host mechanisms for preventing
excessive, dangerous acute responses to LPS. Cells can quickly become
resistant (tolerant) to LPS stimulation, a desensitization that is at
least partly related to overexpression of the p50 subunit of NF-
B
(4, 54). Acyloxyacyl hydrolase, an enzyme found in monocytes
and neutrophils, can inactivate LPS by removing some of its fatty acyl
chains, and intracellular dephosphorylation may also reduce LPS
activity (27). In plasma, soluble molecules such as
bactericidal permeability-increasing protein, lysozyme, and lactoferrin
can bind LPS and neutralize its stimulatory potency (9-11).
When gram-negative bacteria or LPS-containing bacterial membrane
fragments enter the bloodstream, however, arguably the most important
known mechanism for preventing excessive cellular responses is the
transfer of LPS to circulating plasma lipoproteins.
When purified LPS (pLPS) aggregates are injected intravenously into
animals, approximately half of the LPS is cleared from the plasma
within a few minutes, presumably by binding to circulating or
marginated leukocytes (14, 16, 31). Most of the remaining LPS binds rapidly to circulating lipoproteins (13) and then (31, 35) can circulate in the plasma for many hours before the lipoproteins are cleared by the liver and other organs
(34). Whereas LPS that binds to leukocytes can initiate
inflammatory responses, LPS that binds to lipoproteins is essentially
inactivated (5, 31, 35, 39, 48). Binding to lipoproteins
thus seems to be an important mechanism for LPS detoxification in vivo,
and administering lipoproteins to animals can protect them from LPS challenge (12, 38, 41). Although LPS can bind to all of the
major plasma lipoproteins (39), most investigative attention has focused on the interactions of LPS with high-density lipoproteins (HDL).
Recent studies have clarified many other aspects of LPS movement in
plasma. LBP can transfer pLPS from aggregates to HDL (52). sCD14 accelerates LBP-mediated transfer of purified LPS to HDL when
tested using isolated reagents in vitro (51), yet it
contributes very little to the movement of purified LPS to HDL in whole
plasma (53). Phospholipid transfer protein (PLTP), which
shares protein sequence similarity with LBP, can also promote rapid
transfer of LPS to HDL in normal plasma (17). In contrast to
LBP, PLTP does not promote binding of pLPS to CD14; indeed, in studies
using pLPS, PLTP was reported to inhibit the ability of LPS to
stimulate CD14-expressing cells (17).
Interpretation of all of these experiments has been limited by the fact
that LPS is naturally a constituent of bacterial outer membranes, not
an isolated and purified chemical. Studies using pLPS aggregates thus
have an uncertain relationship to in vivo phenomena. Although much of
the LPS in bacterial membrane fragments (blebs) is known to transfer to
HDL when the fragments are injected intravenously into rats
(37), nothing is known about the biochemical mechanisms that
mediate this transfer. The studies described here were therefore
performed to evaluate the ability of the major LPS transfer proteins to
transfer LPS from Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium
blebs to sCD14, lipoproteins, and monocytes.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Bacteria.
G-30, a galactose epimerase-deficient
(galE) strain of Salmonella serovar Typhimurium,
was grown in proteose peptone beef extract broth (Difco Laboratories,
Detroit, Mich.) that had been dialyzed against distilled water in order
to remove methionine and cysteine and then supplemented with M9 salts
(42) containing 1 mM MgSO4, 0.11 mM
D-galactose, and 0.16% (vol/vol) glycerol or glucose. The
broth (100 ml) was then supplemented with 600 µCi of
D-[6-3H-galactose] (34.6 Ci/mmol; DuPont NEN
Life Sciences, Boston, Mass.), 1.5 mCi of
[35S]methionine-cysteine (Tran35S-label;
1,175 Ci/mmol; ICN Pharmaceuticals, Irvine, Calif.), and 1 ml of
bacteria that had been incubated overnight in M9 minimal medium. In
galE strains, exogenous galactose is incorporated
exclusively into LPS; under the growth conditions described here,
35S was found only in bacterial proteins. When the culture
reached an optical density at 540 nm of 0.3 to 0.4, 3.75 mM
D-galactose was added to the medium and growth was
continued to a density of 0.6 to 0.8. The bacteria were pelleted
(4,000 × g, 20 min, 4°C), and the supernatant was
filtered (0.45-µm-pore-size filter) and saved at 4°C. The pelleted
bacteria were washed with 10 mM HEPES buffer (pH 7.4), resuspended in 2 ml of 100 mM HEPES, and stored at
85°C until used to prepare pLPS.
Preparation of bacterial membrane fragments (blebs).
The
blebs were precipitated by adding 2.5 volumes of saturated ammonium
sulfate to the filtered culture supernatant and allowing the mixture to
stand at 4°C overnight (37). The fine precipitate was
pelleted by centrifugation (4,000 × g, 2 h,
4°C) and dialyzed against phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) that
contained 0.02% NaN3. The blebs were separated from
labeled soluble proteins by centrifugation through a 12% sucrose
solution onto a 60% sucrose cushion (150,000 × g,
4.5 h, 4°C). The 60% sucrose cushion and blebs were then dialyzed against PBS that contained 0.02% NaN3. The final
concentration of bleb LPS was estimated by its [3H]LPS
content as described below.
Electron microscopy of blebs.
The blebs in PBS with 0.02%
NaN3 were concentrated by ultracentrifugation
(150,000 × g, 4.5 h, 4°C); 100-mesh nickel
grids (Electron Microscopy Sciences, Fort Washington, Pa.) coated with Formvar and carbon by standard methods were floated over droplets of
the concentrated bleb suspension for 5 min. The grids were then washed
with distilled water and negatively stained by floating the grids over
1% aqueous uranyl acetate grids (Electron Microscopy Sciences) for 1 to 2 min. Excess uranyl acetate was removed by wicking onto filter
paper, and the grids were dried in a vacuum desiccator. The specimens
were viewed by electron microscopy in a Jeol JEM 100SX microscope,
photographed at a magnification of ×30,000 on the negative film plate,
and printed on photographic paper. Negative control grids, floated over
distilled water and negatively stained, did not reveal any artifact structures.
Preparation of pLPS.
[3H]LPS was extracted
from the whole bacteria by the hot phenol-water method (49).
The pLPS was suspended in 10 mM Tris HCl with 0.01% triethylamine and
quantitated by comparing the intensity of silver staining
(46) on a sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-12% polyacrylamide
gel to that of known amounts of wild-type Salmonella serovar
Typhimurium pLPS. The specific activity (3H disintegrations
per minute per microgram) of the pLPS was then calculated, and the
amount of LPS in the blebs was estimated based on 3H
content. The specific activities of the preparations ranged from 51,000 to 171,000 dpm/µg of LPS. Estimations of LPS molar concentrations
assumed an average molecular mass of 5,500 Da.
Preparation and quantification of LBP, PLTP, and sCD14.
CHO
cells stably transfected with recombinant human LBP or empty vector
(pRc/RSV) were provided by P. Tobias (Scripps Research Institute, La
Jolla, Calif.). The cells (CHO-rLBP or CHO-RSV) were incubated in
roller bottles containing 200 ml of serum-free medium (CHO-S-SFM-II;
Life Technologies, Grand Island, N.Y.) with 1% (vol/vol) SP-Sepharose
beads (Pharmacia Biotech, Uppsala, Sweden) for 48 h. The beads
were sedimented by gravity, washed in PBS containing 0.5 mM
phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride and 0.02% NaN3, packed in a
pyrogen-free column, and equilibrated with 0.4 M NaCl in 20 mM sodium
acetate (pH 4.0) (45). LBP was eluted by increasing the NaCl
concentration to 1.4 M. Protein elution was monitored spectrophotometrically (280 nm). The peak fractions were pooled and
placed in a dialysis bag (12,000- to 14,000-molecular-weight cutoff),
dialyzed against PBS containing 0.02% NaN3, and then concentrated by coating the outside of the dialysis bag with
polyethelene glycol (molecular weight, 20,000). The LBP concentration
was measured by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) using
reagents generously provided by P. Tobias. Recombinant human His-tagged
PLTP was prepared as described elsewhere (2, 17).
Recombinant human sCD14 was a gift from Rolf Thieringer and Samuel
Wright (Merck, Rahway, N.J.).
Lipoproteins.
Native HDL (nHDL) was isolated from human
plasma by sequential ultracentrifugation in increasing concentrations
of potassium bromide (KBr) (8, 20) and then thoroughly
dialyzed against cold 0.9% NaCl containing 0.25 mM EDTA (pH 8).
Lyophilized reconstituted HDL (R-HDL) (30) was a gift from
P. Lerch (Swiss Red Cross Blood Transfusion Service, Bern,
Switzerland). It was resuspended in distilled water and dialyzed
against cold 0.9% NaCl containing 0.25 mM EDTA (pH 8) to remove free
cholate. R-HDL contained apolipoprotein A-I (apoA-I) and
phosphatidylcholine in a 1:160 molar ratio. The concentrations of nHDL
and R-HDL were determined by apoA-I assay (Sigma, St. Louis, Mo.). For
some experiments, plasma was obtained from blood that was
anticoagulated with streptokinase (Calbiochem).
In vitro assay of LPS release from blebs.
Sucrose density
gradients (4 to 24% sucrose in 5 ml) were made as previously described
(35). Samples (0.15 ml) containing radiolabeled blebs were
added to the tops of the gradients, and the tubes were centrifuged
(150,000 × g, 4.5 h, room temperature). Fractions
(approximately 0.35 ml) were collected from the bottom of the each tube
with an 18-gauge needle. 3H and 35S
radioactivity was measured by adding the fractions to 4 ml of Budget-Solve scintillation cocktail (Research Products International Corp., Mount Prospect, Ill.) that contained 0.2 ml of 1% SDS in 10 mM
EDTA and counting in a Packard MINAXI TRI-CARB 4000 series scintillation counter (Packard Instrument Company, Downer's Grove, Ill.) with external standardization and automatic quench correction.
Immunoprecipitation of [3H]LPS-sCD14
complexes.
Samples (0.15 ml) containing radiolabeled blebs (80 ng
of LPS or 0.54 µg/ml), LBP (0.32 µg/ml), and sCD14 (13.4 µg/ml)
were incubated for 30 min at 37°C with occasional mixing, and the
mixtures were centrifuged onto sucrose density gradients as described
above. The top (released LPS) and bottom (blebs) halves of the density gradient were separated, and levels of 3H and
35S radioactivity were measured in an aliquot of each by
scintillation counting; 1 ml of each half was then supplemented with 25 µl of 10% bovine serum albumin and either 5 µg of mouse anti-human
2G9 antibody (anti-sCD14 antibody supplied by Richard Darveau,
University of Washington, Seattle) or 5 µg of control antibody MOPC
141 (Sigma, St. Louis, Mo.), and the mixtures were allowed to stand for
1 h at 4°C. Fifty microliters of a 1:1 suspension of Pansorbin
(Calbiochem-Novabiochem Corporation, La Jolla, Calif.) that had been
washed in immunoprecipitation buffer (20 mM Tris [pH 7.5], 250 mM
NaCl, 2 mM EDTA, 1 mM phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, 1 µg of
aprotinin per ml, 1 µg of pepstatin A per ml) was then added to each
sample and rocked on a platform for 1 h at 4°C. The Pansorbin
was pelleted by centrifugation (4,000 rpm, 2 min, 4°C), washed three
times with immunoprecipitation buffer, suspended in 200 µl of 1% SDS
in 10 mM EDTA, and placed in a 50°C water bath for 5 min. Levels of
3H and 35S radioactivity were measured in the
supernatants and Pansorbin pellets by scintillation counting.
Assay of [3H]LPS transfer from blebs to
lipoproteins.
After incubating tritium-labeled pLPS or blebs with
plasma or purified lipoproteins and LPS transfer proteins, the
[3H]LPS-lipoprotein complexes were isolated from the
mixtures by sequential ultracentrifugation (244,000 × g, 45 h, 4°C) in KBr at densities of 1.019 (very low
density lipoproteins [VLDL]), 1.063 (low-density lipoproteins
[LDL]), and 1.21 (HDL) g/ml. The tubes were sliced two-thirds of the
distance from the bottom. Top and bottom fractions were brought to a
total volume of 10 ml with distilled water, and the radioactivity in
1-ml aliquots was measured as described above. Radioactivity located in
the top fraction was assumed to be associated with lipoprotein
particles since pLPS or bleb LPS, in the absence of lipoproteins, was
recovered from the bottom fraction of the tube.
Depletion of LBP and PLTP activity from serum.
To neutralize
PLTP, 100 µl of normal serum was incubated for 30 min on ice with 30 µl of Rb72 rabbit anti-human PLTP (purified immunoglobulin G [IgG];
17 mg of IgG/ml); the remaining PLTP activity was 2% of that in the
untreated serum. To neutralize LBP, we added 10 µg of anti-human LBP
monoclonal antibody (MAb) 1E8 (a gift from P. Tobias) to 100 µl of
serum and incubated the mixture for 30 min on ice. This method resulted
in nearly complete inhibition of LBP-mediated LPS binding to
mCD14-expressing cells, indicating effective LBP neutralization (not
shown). To neutralize sCD14, we added 10 µg of anti-CD14 MAb 60bca to
100 µl of serum and incubated the mixture for 30 min on ice.
To deplete LBP from serum, anti-human LBP MAb 18G4 (a gift from P. Tobias) or nonimmune mouse IgG was covalently bound to Avidchrom
hydrazide F gel beads (Unisyn Technologies, Hopkinton, Mass.) according
to the manufacturer's instructions. The antibody-coated beads (1-ml
packed volume) were suspended in fresh human serum (4 to 5 ml) obtained
from healthy volunteers, mixed overnight on a rocking platform at
4°C, and then centrifuged (850 × g, 2 min, 4°C).
The LBP concentration was measured in the control and LBP-depleted sera
by ELISA. PLTP activity was measured as described elsewhere
(6). Over 99% of the LBP was removed from the serum. Since
the control antibody also removed more than 50% of LBP from serum, the
unadsorbed serum was used as the control. Approximately 30% of the
serum PLTP activity was also removed during LBP depletion.
IL-8 release assay.
THP-1 cells (47) were
obtained from D. Altieri (Scripps Research Institute) and cultured as
previously described (28). To induce CD14 expression, the
cells were cultured in 0.05 µM 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3
for 48 to 72 h. The differentiated THP-1 cells were washed with
cold RPMI 1640 and resuspended in Cellgro complete serum-free medium
(Mediatech, Herndon, Va.) containing 20 mM HEPES buffer (pH 7.4) at
6 × 106 to 8 × 106 cells/ml.
Radiolabeled blebs or pLPS from the same G-30 Salmonella serovar Typhimurium culture were incubated with LBP and sCD14 before
centrifugation on 4 to 24% sucrose density gradients as previously
described. Aliquots of the top half of the density gradient
(sCD14-[3H]LPS complexes) were then added to
differentiated THP-1 cells in serum-free medium and incubated for
2 h at 37°C. Blebs that were not incubated with LBP and sCD14 or
centrifuged on sucrose density gradients were tested in parallel. The
cells were removed by centrifugation (750 × g, 2 min,
4°C), and the culture supernatants were assayed for interleukin-8
(IL-8) (DuoSet ELISA development system; Genzyme, Cambridge, Mass.). In
further experiments, blebs were incubated with or without LBP, PLTP,
and sCD14 (30 min, 37°C) before direct addition to the differentiated
THP-1 cells and incubation for 2 h at 37°C. The cells were again
removed by centrifugation, and the culture supernatants were assayed
for IL-8.
 |
RESULTS |
Electron microscopy of the blebs revealed small vesicular
structures that ranged in size from 25 to 300 nm (Fig.
1). This size range is similar to that
found in previous ultrastructural analyses of bacterial membrane blebs
(33). Very few flagella and no intact bacteria were found in
the preparations.

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FIG. 1.
Ultrastructure of bacterial membrane fragments. Outer
membrane blebs were isolated from Salmonella serovar
Typhimurium culture supernatants as described in Materials and Methods.
The blebs were concentrated by ultracentrifugation, resuspended in PBS,
allowed to adhere to Formvar-coated grids, negatively stained with 1%
uranyl acetate, and viewed by transmission electron microscopy. The bar
represents 100 nm.
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LBP transfers LPS from bacterial membranes to sCD14; PLTP does
not.
Sucrose gradient centrifugation was used to evaluate LPS
release from blebs (35). Blebs containing
[3H]LPS and 35S-labeled protein sedimented to
the bottom of the 4 to 24% sucrose gradient. In contrast, after
bacterial membranes were disrupted with deoxycholate, a large
percentage of both radiolabels remained in the top fractions of the
gradient (Fig. 2). In subsequent
experiments, release of LPS from the blebs was assumed when
[3H]LPS was found at the top of the gradient while
35S-protein pelleted to the bottom.

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FIG. 2.
Sucrose gradient analysis of LPS release from blebs.
Blebs containing 3,300 dpm of [3H]LPS and 2,800 dpm of
35S-protein were incubated with 0.3% deoxycholate for 30 min at 37°C and then centrifuged onto 4 to 24% sucrose gradients.
Untreated blebs were used as controls. After centrifugation, fractions
were collected, and the level of 3H and 35S
radioactivity in each fraction was determined. The experiment was
repeated with similar results.
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To investigate the roles of plasma LPS transfer proteins in releasing
LPS from bacterial membranes, radiolabeled blebs containing 80 ng of
LPS (0.54 µg/ml) were exposed to LBP (0.32 µg/ml) with or without
sCD14 (27 µg/ml) at 37°C for 30 min. The mixtures were then
analyzed by centrifugation onto sucrose gradients. Incubation of blebs
with LBP alone or sCD14 alone did not release LPS from the blebs, while
incubation with both LBP and sCD14 released 49% ± 7.4% (mean ± standard deviation, n = 4) of the LPS (Fig.
3A). In another experiment, very little
release of LPS occurred when blebs were incubated with as much as 3.2 µg of LBP per ml (data not shown). When blebs were incubated with
PLTP (10 µg/ml) and sCD14, there was no significant release of
[3H]LPS (Fig. 3B). Increasing the sCD14 concentration in
the presence of LBP increased LPS release from the blebs, while only
trivial amounts of 35S-labeled protein were released (Fig.
4).

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FIG. 3.
When CD14 is present, LBP releases LPS from blebs. (A)
Blebs containing 80 ng of [3H]LPS (0.54 µg/ml) were
incubated for 30 min at 37°C with a 0.06:1 molar ratio of LBP (0.324 µg/ml) to LPS, with a 5.5:1 molar excess of sCD14 (26.7 µg/ml), or
with LBP plus sCD14. The mixtures were then centrifuged onto 4 to 24%
sucrose gradients. Symbols show means ± standard errors of four
independent experiments. (B) Blebs containing 80 ng of
[3H]LPS (0.54 µg/ml) were incubated for 30 min at
37°C with a 2.8:1 molar excess of sCD14 (13.4 µg/ml) and either a
0.06:1 molar ratio of LBP (0.324 µg/ml) or a 1.4:1 molar excess of
PLTP (10.7 µg/ml). The mixtures were then centrifuged onto 4 to 24%
sucrose gradients. Symbols indicate the means and ranges from two
independent experiments.
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FIG. 4.
sCD14 enhances LBP-mediated LPS release from blebs.
Blebs containing 80 ng of [3H]LPS (0.54 µg/ml) were
incubated with a 0.06:1 molar ratio of LBP (0.324 µg/ml) and
increasing amounts of sCD14 (0 to 26.7 µg/ml) for 30 min at 37°C
and then centrifuged onto 4 to 24% sucrose gradients. Symbols indicate
the means and ranges from two independent experiments.
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Previous studies have suggested that LPS can bind to sCD14, which then
functions as an LPS carrier or transfer protein (15, 19,
51), and we have previously shown that pLPS-sCD14 complexes remain in the top fractions of sucrose gradients (26). To
determine whether LBP can transfer membrane [3H]LPS to
sCD14, we used anti-CD14 MAbs to immunoprecipitate CD14 from the
incubation mixtures. We found that 32% of the LPS in the top gradient
fractions and only 3% of the bleb LPS in the bottom gradient fractions
could be coimmunoprecipitated. Very little 35S-labeled
protein was recovered from the top of the gradient, and only 6% of the
35S-labeled protein in this fraction was
coimmunoprecipitated by the anti-CD14 MAb. Likewise, only 3% of the
35S-labeled protein was found in immunoprecipitates from
the bottom gradient fractions.
LBP and PLTP can transfer LPS from blebs to HDL.
Since both
LBP and sCD14 were needed to release LPS from bacterial membranes, we
next asked whether both proteins were necessary to transfer LPS from
blebs to HDL. For this analysis we used R-HDL (a defined reagent that
contains only apoA-I and phosphatidylcholine) and separated blebs from
R-HDL-bound LPS by ultracentrifugal flotation in KBr (
= 1.21 g/ml). Purified [3H]LPS aggregates were used as a
control. In preliminary experiments, we found aggregates of pLPS and
pLPS-sCD14 complexes at the bottom of the centrifuge tube (data not
shown), whereas R-HDL-bound pLPS (produced by incubating pLPS with
R-HDL and LBP with or without sCD14) was recovered from the top (Fig.
5A).

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FIG. 5.
LBP and PLTP transfer LPS from blebs to HDL. (A) Blebs
containing 80 ng of [3H]LPS (0.8 µg/ml) were incubated
with R-HDL (1 mg of apoA-I/ml) for 30 min at 37°C with or without LBP
(0.05 µg/ml) or sCD14 (4.0 µg/ml). The HDL was then separated by
ultracentrifugal flotation, and the fraction of the
[3H]LPS that bound to the HDL was measured. sCD14
enhanced the ability of LBP to promote LPS transfer to HDL. (B) Blebs
containing 80 ng of [3H]LPS (0.8 µg/ml) were incubated
for 30 min at 37°C with nHDL (0.5 mg of apoA-I/ml) and the indicated
amounts of LBP or PLTP. Bars indicate the means and ranges of two
independent experiments.
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sCD14 alone did not transfer LPS from membrane blebs to R-HDL, while
LBP transferred over 62% (standard deviation = 8%, n = 3 experiments) of the membrane LPS to R-HDL. LPS transfer activity was maximal at substoichiometric concentrations of LBP (Fig. 5B). When
sCD14 was incubated with blebs, LBP, and R-HDL, over 90% of the LPS
transferred from blebs to R-HDL (Fig. 5A). sCD14 thus enhances the
ability of LBP to transfer LPS to R-HDL.
LBP also transferred LPS from blebs to nHDL. However, the amount of
nHDL required to accept LPS from membranes in a 30-min incubation was
greater than the amount of R-HDL needed for the same reaction (data not
shown). PLTP also transferred LPS from bacterial membranes to nHDL
(Fig. 5B).
LBP transfers LPS to lipoproteins in plasma.
When blebs were
incubated in undiluted normal human plasma for 30 min at 37°C, 43%
of the [3H]LPS floated in the
1.21-g/ml KBr
fractions, and the majority of the lipoprotein-bound
[3H]LPS was found in HDL (Fig.
6).

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FIG. 6.
Bleb LPS transfers to lipoproteins in normal human
plasma. Blebs containing 80 ng of [3H]LPS (0.8 µg/ml)
were incubated for 2 h at 37°C with human platelet-free plasma
(prepared from whole blood that contained streptokinase [150 U/ml] to
prevent clotting), and the VLDL, LDL, and HDL were separated
sequentially by ultracentrifugal flotation according to the indicated
densities. Bars indicate the means and ranges of two experiments
performed in duplicate.
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To determine whether endogenous LBP and PLTP were responsible for the
transfer of bleb LPS to lipoproteins, we used antibodies to neutralize
the two proteins in normal human serum. When an anti-LBP MAb was added
to normal serum, LPS transfer from blebs to serum lipoproteins
decreased by nearly 50% (Fig. 7). In
contrast, inhibiting PLTP activity in normal serum did not reduce LPS
transfer from blebs to lipoproteins. Normal levels of LBP are thus able to compensate for the absence of PLTP. When both anti-LBP and anti-PLTP
antibodies were added to the serum, the reduction in LPS transfer was
identical to that seen with anti-LBP alone. Adding anti-CD14 antibodies
did not further reduce LPS transfer (not shown). In other experiments
we depleted over 99% of the serum LBP by immunoadsorption (see
Materials and Methods); this reduced LPS transfer from blebs to serum
lipoproteins by nearly 50% (not shown). When the LBP-depleted serum
was supplemented with recombinant LBP, LPS transfer from blebs to HDL
was restored to the levels seen in normal human serum (not shown).
These data thus suggest that (i) LBP contributes substantially to the
transfer of LPS from membranes to lipoproteins in human serum in vitro
and (ii) serum contains factor(s) other than LBP, PLTP, and sCD14 that can also promote LPS transfer to lipoproteins.

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FIG. 7.
LBP neutralization inhibits LPS transfer from blebs to
lipoproteins. A 0.1-ml aliquot of normal human serum was preincubated
for 30 min on ice with or without 5 µl of anti-LBP (10 µg), 30 µl
of anti-PLTP (0.53 mg), or 10 µl of control mouse anti-IgG1 (10 µg). The mixtures were then diluted to 1 ml with PBS, blebs
containing 80 ng of [3H]LPS were added, incubation was
continued for 30 min at 37°C, and the lipoproteins were isolated by
flotation at = 1.21 g/ml. The bars show the means and ranges
of three experiments performed in duplicate. *, significantly
different from positive control (P < 0.05, analysis of
variance).
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LBP transfers LPS from blebs to host cell membranes.
We next
compared sCD14-[3H]LPS complexes derived from blebs and
pLPS for the ability to stimulate IL-8 production by differentiated THP-1 cells. Bleb-derived sCD14-[3H]LPS complexes were
approximately 30-fold more potent than complexes derived from purified
LPS and sCD14 (Fig. 8A). In further
experiments, we compared the potency of blebs that had been incubated
for 30 min with or without LBP, PLTP, or sCD14. Incubation with LBP and sCD14 increased bleb-induced IL-8 secretion approximately 100-fold (Fig. 8B). PLTP (1:3 [mol/mol] to bleb LPS and 16:1 to LBP,
sufficient to transfer most of the bleb LPS to lipoproteins in a 30-min
incubation) neither enhanced nor inhibited the ability of the blebs to
stimulate IL-8 secretion (Fig. 8B). In further experiments, a molar
excess of PLTP (3:1 to bleb LPS and 160:1 to LBP) only partially
inhibited LBP's ability to increase bleb-induced IL-8 secretion (data
not shown).

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FIG. 8.
LBP and sCD14 enhance monocyte stimulation by bacterial
membranes; PLTP does not. (A) To prepare complexes of sCD14 with bleb
or pLPS, 100 ng of pLPS or blebs containing 100 ng of LPS were
incubated at 37°C for 30 min with 0.06 µg of LBP and 0.5 µg of
sCD14. The mixtures were centrifuged onto 4 to 24% sucrose gradients,
and aliquots of the top halves of the gradients were counted to measure
the sCD14-associated [3H]LPS. As a control, blebs were
added to a sucrose gradient without LBP and sCD14. Equal amounts of
[3H]LPS from the three preparations were then diluted in
serum-free medium and added to vitamin D3-differentiated
THP-1 cells (7 × 105), followed by incubation for
2 h at 37°C. The cells were pelleted by centrifugation, and IL-8
was measured in the culture medium. (B) Blebs containing 100 ng of LPS
were incubated at 37°C for 30 min with or without 0.03 µg of LBP,
0.5 µg of sCD14, or 0.5 µg of PLTP, and the mixtures were incubated
with THP-1 cells as described above. IL-8 was measured in the culture
supernatants. Symbols show the means of duplicate determinations. Each
of these experiments was repeated with similar results.
|
|
 |
DISCUSSION |
As they grow in vivo, gram-negative bacteria release membrane
blebs (3, 36). When they were isolated from bacterial
cultures and injected intravenously into rats, blebs surrendered much
more of their LPS to plasma lipoproteins than did bacterial outer
membranes or intact bacteria (37). It thus seems likely that
blebs contain a significant fraction of the bacterial membrane LPS that
interacts with lipoproteins in vivo. Although the composition of the
blebs released by bacteria in vivo is not known, when
Salmonella serovar Typhimurium blebs were compared to
bacterial outer membranes isolated from the same in vitro cultures, the
blebs were enriched in LPS and relatively depleted in protein and
phospholipid (37); these differences may account for the
greater susceptibility of bleb LPS to extraction by plasma transfer proteins.
LPS may also be transferred directly from intact bacterial membranes in
sufficient quantities to stimulate host cells (25, 37).
Although other constituents of the gram-negative bacterial membrane can
also stimulate cells, LPS seems to play a dominant role. In keeping
with this conclusion, Somerville et al. showed that an
Escherichia coli mutant (msbB) expressing an
altered LPS was 100-fold less stimulatory to endothelial cells and
monocytes than was wild-type E. coli (44).
Similarly, we found that blebs were approximately 100- to 1,000-fold
more stimulatory when they were incubated with LBP, which released the
LPS from the blebs and transferred it to mCD14 on the THP-1 cells.
We found that low concentrations of LBP can remove LPS from blebs when
an appropriate acceptor (lipoprotein or sCD14) is present. Incubating
blebs with sCD14 alone did not release LPS. This finding suggests that
LBP and CD14 cooperate to extract LPS or that sCD14 functions as an
acceptor for LPS that is released from the blebs by LBP. The latter
interpretation is favored by the following observations: (i) LBP alone,
but not sCD14 alone, can transfer LPS from blebs to HDL, another LPS
acceptor, and (ii) when both LBP and sCD14 were present in the
incubation mixtures, much of the released LPS was found in complexes
with sCD14 (see Results). Previous studies found that sCD14 can slowly
bind the LPS in purified aggregates (18), and we cannot rule
out the possibility that it also slowly removes LPS from blebs.
However, this activity is unlikely to be physiologically significant
because it occurs very slowly and because LBP is always present in
plasma to promote the transfer of LPS to sCD14. PLTP, which does not
transfer LPS from purified aggregates to CD14 (17), also did
not transfer LPS from blebs to sCD14. Under the conditions of our
experiments, PLTP removed LPS from blebs only when HDL was present to
accept it.
In the model proposed by Wurfel et al. for LPS transfer from purified
aggregates to lipoproteins, LBP mediates LPS transfer (51).
sCD14 did not contribute greatly to this process in whole plasma
(53), a finding that we confirmed in these experiments. The
LPS transfer activity of sCD14 may become more important when serum LBP
levels rise and PLTP levels fall during acute infection and
inflammation (1, 24).
Removing LBP from serum (by immunoadsorption) and neutralizing it (with
a MAb) both resulted in a 50% decrease in the transfer of LPS from
blebs to lipoproteins. In contrast, polyclonal anti-PLTP immunoglobulins (which decreased serum phospholipid transfer activity by 98%) had no effect when added either to normal serum or to serum
that contained the MAb to LBP. Although purified PLTP could clearly
promote LPS transfer to isolated HDL, we were thus unable to show that
native PLTP transfers LPS from blebs to lipoproteins in normal serum.
In this more physiological setting, LBP accounted for approximately
half of the transfer activity, while the remaining activity presumably
reflects the contribution of unknown transfer molecules. It is
noteworthy that the anti-PLTP antibodies inhibited most of the LPS
transfer activity that remained in LBP-depleted serum (data not shown);
this observation indicates that the antibodies can inhibit the LPS
transfer activity of PLTP while suggesting that, like LBP, the unknown
transfer molecules can bind nonspecifically to the beads used for
immunoadsorption, leaving PLTP as the sole LPS transfer protein in the serum.
Our finding that LBP contributes significantly to LPS-lipoprotein
transfer in serum may seem to conflict with the observation of Jack et
al. that LPS clearance was not altered in mice that cannot synthesize
LBP (23). In both LBP-producing and homozygous LBP knockout
mice, they found that >90% of a bolus of radiolabeled LPS was cleared
from the circulation within 5 min. Since LPS that binds to lipoproteins
remains in the circulation for hours (7, 32, 34), it is
possible that the LPS used in the experiments of Jack et al. did not
bind to plasma lipoproteins even in the control (wild-type) mice.
Alternatively, a 50% reduction in LPS-lipoprotein binding might not be
detectable in vivo, or other LPS transfer proteins might be able to
compensate for the absence of LBP in the genetically altered mice.
Further experiments are needed to determine the precise contribution
that LBP makes to LPS-lipoprotein transfer in vivo.
Our data are most consistent with the model shown in Fig.
9. When blebs are released into plasma,
LPS is rapidly extracted from them, principally by LBP. The LPS from
blebs may be neutralized either after LBP-mediated transfer to HDL or
indirectly by transfer to sCD14 with subsequent binding to HDL. The LPS
from blebs may also be stimulatory when transferred by LBP directly to
mCD14-expressing cells, or to sCD14 with subsequent transfer to cells.
Also shown in this model is the ability of sCD14, but not LBP or PLTP,
to transfer LPS from monocyte cell membranes to plasma lipoproteins (29). Whether bleb LPS is neutralized by lipoproteins is
probably determined by the relative concentrations of LBP, sCD14, other LPS transfer proteins, lipoproteins, and target cells in the blood compartment, as well as by the rate at which LPS is cleared from the
blood into tissues.

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|
FIG. 9.
Model for the interactions between bacterial membranes,
lipid transfer proteins, and mCD14-expressing cells in human plasma.
LBP can transfer LPS from blebs to HDL, mCD14-expressing cells, or
sCD14. sCD14 may transfer LPS from blebs to mCD14-expressing cells or
HDL, and it can also transfer LPS from mCD14-expressing cells to
lipoproteins. Although PLTP can transfer LPS from blebs to isolated HDL
particles, a role in LPS transfer to lipoproteins in complete serum
could not be shown.
|
|
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
This research was supported by grants AI18188 from the National
Institute for Allergy and Infectious Diseases and HL30086 from the
National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute. C. J. Vesy was
supported by USPH training grant T32-DK07745.
We thank David Spady, Richard Darveau, Peter Tobias, Rolf Thieringer,
and Samuel Wright for providing essential reagents and John Dietschy
for critical manuscript review.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Internal Medicine, UT Southwestern Medical Center, 5323 Harry Hines
Blvd., Dallas, TX 75235-9113. Phone: (214) 648-3480. Fax: (214)
648-9478. E-mail: robert.munford{at}emailswmed.edu.
Editor:
R. N. Moore
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