Publications by authors named "Dergunov A"

Background: The associations of high-density lipoprotein (HDL) level and functionality with lipid metabolism, inflammation, and innate immunity in coronary artery disease (CAD) remain controversial. The differential expression of a set of genes related to HDL metabolism (24 genes) and atherogenesis (41 genes) in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) from CAD and control patients with varied HDL cholesterol (HDL-C) levels was compared.

Methods: 76 male patients 40-60 years old with CAD diagnosed by angiography and 63 control patients were divided into three groups with low, normal (1.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study examined the expression of 28 differential genes in male patients with coronary artery disease (CAD) compared to control patients, focusing on genes related to HDL metabolism and atherosclerosis.
  • - Several genes involved in cholesterol transport showed varied expression, with some down-regulated, indicating potential links to systemic inflammation and HDL cholesterol levels in CAD patients.
  • - The findings suggest that specific gene expressions may serve as targets for diagnosing and treating CAD and atherosclerosis, emphasizing both protective and harmful roles of HDL functionality.
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Over the past decade, numerous studies have shown that circular RNAs (circRNAs) play a significant role in coronary artery atherogenesis and other cardiovascular diseases. They belong to the class of non-coding RNAs and arise as a result of non-canonical splicing of premature RNA, which results in the formation of closed single-stranded circRNA molecules that lack 5'-end caps and 3'-end poly(A) tails. circRNAs have broad post-transcriptional regulatory activity.

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Cholesterol efflux is the first and rate-limiting step of reverse cholesterol transport (RCT) from peripheric cells to the liver. The involvement of high-density lipoprotein (HDL) in RCT determines the atheroprotective properties of HDL. Cholesterol efflux from different membrane pools includes both passive and energy-dependent processes.

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Atheroprotective properties of human plasma high-density lipoproteins (HDLs) are determined by their involvement in reverse cholesterol transport (RCT) from the macrophage to the liver. , , and SR-BI cholesterol transporters are involved in cholesterol efflux from macrophages to lipid-free ApoA-I and HDL as a first RCT step. Molecular determinants of RCT efficiency that may possess diagnostic and therapeutic meaning remain largely unknown.

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We report the modeling of the interaction of differently self-associated lipid-free apoA-I with cholesterol monomer and tail-to-tail (TT) or face-to-face (FF) cholesterol dimer. Cholesterol dimerization is exploited to reconcile the existing experimental data on cholesterol binding to apoA-I with extremely low critical micelle concentration of cholesterol. Two crystal structures of 1-43 N-truncated apolipoprotein Δ(1-43)A-I tetramer (PDB ID: 1AV1, structure B), 185-243 C-truncated apolipoprotein Δ(185-243)A-I dimer (PDB ID: 3R2P, structure M) were analyzed.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study examined the relationship between high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C) levels and gene expression in white blood cells from 38 men without coronary atherosclerosis, focusing on 63 specific genes involved in HDL metabolism and atherogenesis.
  • - Results showed that certain genes related to HDL metabolism had varying correlations with HDL-C; some showed a negative correlation, while the APOA1 gene was positively correlated, suggesting complex regulation of cholesterol movement in the body.
  • - The findings indicate that lower expression of inflammation-related genes is linked to higher HDL-C levels, and the study suggests that focusing on specific genes can help validate HDL function and its role in atherogenesis in patients without visible heart disease.
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We studied the mechanism of HDL denaturation with concomitant apoA-I dissociation with HDL preparations from 48 patients with a wide range of plasma HDL-C and evaluated the contribution of lipid-free apoA-I into cholesterol efflux from macrophage, in particular, mediated by cholesterol transporter ABCA1. We prepared HDL by precipitation of apoB-containing lipoproteins by polyethylene glycol and used the chaotropic agent urea to denature HDL preparations. Apo-I dissociation from urea-treated HDL was assessed by the increase of preβ-band fraction with agarose gel electrophoresis followed by electro transfer and immunodetection and by the increase of ABCA1-mediated efflux of fluorescent analogue BODIPY-Cholesterol from RAW 264.

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Cholesterol efflux is the key process protecting the vascular system from the development of atherosclerotic lesions. Various extracellular and intracellular events affect the ability of the cell to efflux excess cholesterol. To explore the possible pathways and processes that promote or inhibit cholesterol efflux, we applied a combined cheminformatic and bioinformatic approach.

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ABCA1, ABCG1 transporters, and SR-B1 receptor are the major proteins involved in cholesterol efflux from cells. We superposed in silico the location of putative cholesterol (Chol)-binding motifs CRAC/CARC and CCM in human ABCA1, ABCG1, and SR-B1 with (1) transmembrane protein topology, (2) a profile of structural order of protein, and (3) with an influence of single amino acid substitutions on protein structure and function. ABCA1, ABCG1, and SR-B1 molecules contain 50, 19, and 13 Chol-binding motifs, respectively, that are localized either in membrane helices, or at membrane-water interface, or in water-exposed protein regions.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates the differences in high-density lipoprotein (HDL) and its relationship with cholesterol levels in male subjects free of atherosclerosis, focusing on the roles of apoA-I and various lipid levels.
  • It finds that individuals with lower HDL (hypoalphalipoproteinemia) have less apoA-I in their preβ-HDL, and the preβ-to-α ratio of apoA-I remains stable across certain HDL cholesterol ranges but increases with higher triacylglycerol levels.
  • Additionally, gene expression analysis reveals that certain HDL metabolism-related genes are downregulated in people with higher HDL levels (hyperalphalipoproteinemia), which may lead to reduced cholesterol transport to the liver and
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Cholesterol transport between intracellular compartments proceeds by both energy- and non-energy-dependent processes. Energy-dependent vesicular traffic partly contributes to cholesterol flux between endoplasmic reticulum, plasma membrane, and endocytic vesicles. Membrane contact sites and lipid transfer proteins are involved in nonvesicular lipid traffic.

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Background: Cholesterol efflux as a key event in reverse cholesterol transport (RCT) is considered now as both diagnostic tool and a promising target for the treatment of atherosclerosis. Radioactive in vitro cholesterol efflux assay (CEA) is the gold standard for determination of efflux at cellular level. Fluorescent tracers and stable isotope-labeled cholesterol gradually come into use as convenient tools for non-radioactive CEAs.

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The structure and stability of apolipoprotein (apo)A-I, the major apolipoprotein of human plasma high-density lipoproteins (HDL), determine the efficiency of the protein in the process of HDL generation and affect HDL properties in binding and exchanging its constituents, thus playing an essential role in reverse cholesterol transport. The equilibrium stability of an apoA-I molecule at the lipid interface (12.7 kcal/mol) predicted by a thermodynamic cycle for apolipoprotein folding-unfolding in water and at interface, largely exceeds apoA-I helix stability in HDL against chemical denaturation (3-5 kcal/mol).

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The transfer of cholesteryl ester by recombinant cholesteryl ester transfer protein (CETP) between reconstituted discoidal high-density lipoprotein (rHDL) was studied. Particles contained apolipoprotein A-I, unsaturated POPC or saturated DPPC and cholesteryl ester as cholesteryl 1-pyrenedecanoate (CPD) or cholesteryl laurate (CL) in donor and acceptor rHDL, respectively. Probe dynamics fulfilled the quenching sphere-of-action model.

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The structure of human plasma cholesteryl ester transfer protein (CETP) was mapped in silico by a search of the structural effects of missense mutations in the CETP gene. Sixteen deleterious substitutions were chosen among 54 known missense mutations and further ranked by stability change score into six structural and ten functional mutations with large and small stability changes, respectively. A cluster of eight mutations in a central region spanning residues 184-296 with exclusively destabilizing effects was evident.

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Twenty-nine from 52 missense mutations in apoA-I gene are predicted to be deleterious by both SIFT and PolyPhen-2 algorithms. Among those, eight mutations with a prominent change in structure stability as modeled by the SDM tool for both lipid-free (Mei and Atkinson (2011) PDB ID: 3R2P) and HDL-bound (Wu et al. (2009) PDB ID: 3K2S) apoA-I, are referred as structural.

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Existing kinetic data of cholesteryl ester formation by lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase in discoidal high-density lipoproteins with 34 mutations of apoA-I that involved all putative helices were grouped by cluster analysis into four noncoincident regions with mutations both without any functional impairment and with profound isolated (V- and K-mutations) or common (VK-mutations) effect on V(max)(app) and K(m)(app). Data were analyzed with a new kinetic model of LCAT activity at interface that exploits the efficiency of LCAT binding to the particle, particle dimensions, and surface concentrations of phosphatidylcholine and cholesterol. V-mutations with major location in the central part and C-domain affected the second-order rate constant of cholesteryl ester formation at the solvolysis of acyl-enzyme intermediate by cholesterol as nucleophile.

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Lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase (LCAT) activity towards discoidal HDL with apoA-I was analyzed in conjunction with re-evaluation of conformational stability of apoA-I (Sparks et al., 1993). The reaction at water-lipid interface involves the formation of acyl-enzyme and cholesterol (Chol) as a nucleophilic agent can compete with water at deacylation step.

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APOE alleles and apolipoprotein E isoforms control plasma cholesterol level on population level. Among three ɛ2, ɛ3, ɛ4 alleles, ɛ4 allele is associated with the increase in cholesterol level, risk of atherosclerosis and Alzheimer disease, while ɛ2 allele is associated with the decrease in cholesterol level and risk of atherosclerosis. The increase in plasma triglyceride is an independent risk factor of atherosclerosis and triglyceride-high density lipoprotein coupling determines the efficiency of reverse cholesterol transport.

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GuHCl-induced denaturation of human plasma apoA-I, apoA-II, apoA-IV, apoE3 and three recombinant apoE isoforms in solution and discoidal complexes with phosphatidylcholine (only plasma proteins) was studied. The protein conformational stability (ΔG(H(2)O)) and a slope of linear dependence of free energy of unfolding on GuHCl concentration (m-value) were estimated with the three equilibrium schemes. The data for all proteins, except apoA-II, fit with the three-state model, thus evidencing two-domain structure.

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118 patients with gastric ulcer and 112 healthy people (control set) were examined. It is established that determination of connections between phenotype, responsiveness of general circulation, variability of cardiac rhythm, types of personality and levels of reactive anxiety allows to diagnose not only the prenosological and initial forms of gastric ulcer, but also to determine the tactics of conservative and surgical treatment of this disease.

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To investigate the influence of lipid unsaturation and neutral lipid on the maturation of high density lipoproteins, the discoidal complexes of apoA-I, phosphatidylcholine and cholesteryl ester (CE) were prepared. Saturated dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) and unsaturated palmitoyllinoleoylphosphatidylcholine (PLPC), palmitoyloleoylphosphatidylcholine (POPC), and fluorescent probe cholesteryl 1-pyrenedecanoate (CPD) that forms in a diffusion- and concentration-dependent manner short-lived dimer of unexcited and excited molecules (excimer) were used. The apoA-I/DPPC/CPD complexes were heterogeneous by size, composition and probe location.

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The plasma (P), VLDL (V) triglyceride and apoB (B) clearance rates were measured both as 'mass' clearance (k (1)) and 'within the particle' clearance in three patient groups (E33, E23 and E34 phenotypes) at heparin-induced lipolysis in vivo. The lipid (C)- and apoE (E)-specific lipoprotein profiles both before and after heparin were followed by capillary isotachophoresis. The displacement of apoE by exogenous apoC-III at plasma titration in vitro was measured as well.

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