Foam cells in the atherosclerotic lesion have substantial
cholesterol stores within large, swollen lysosomes. This feature
is mimicked by incubating THP-1 macrophages with mildly oxidized
low density lipoprotein (LDL). Incubation of THP-1 cells with
acetylated LDL produces cytoplasmic cholesteryl ester accumulation
rather than lysosomal storage. The differences could be due
to differences in uptake and delivery of lipoprotein to lysosomes
or to lysosomal and post-lysosomal processing events. We compared
uptake and lysosomal trafficking of acetylated and oxidized
LDL using colloidal gold-labeled lipoproteins. Labeling did
not alter cellular cholesterol accumulation. We found that uptake
and delivery to lysosomes are not different for acetylated and
oxidized LDL. In fact, both oxidized and acetylated LDL can
be delivered to the same lysosomes. Sequential incubation with
oxidized LDL followed by acetylated LDL showed that the
lipid-engorged lysosomes are long-lived structures, continuously
accepting newly ingested lipoprotein. Comparison of acetylated
and oxidized LDL in mouse peritoneal macrophages, a cell which
does not accumulate substantial lysosomal lipid, also revealed
no differences in uptake. This indicates that in THP-1 cells,
the differences in metabolism of oxidized and acetylated LDL
are due to cell-specific lysosomal or post-lysosomal events
not present in B6C3F1 mouse
macrophages.