Cholesterol stimulates the cellular uptake of L-carnitine by the carnitine/organic cation transporter novel 2 (OCTN2)

J Biol Chem. 2021 Jan-Jun:296:100204. doi: 10.1074/jbc.RA120.015175. Epub 2021 Jan 5.

Abstract

The carnitine/organic cation transporter novel 2 (OCTN2) is responsible for the cellular uptake of carnitine in most tissues. Being a transmembrane protein OCTN2 must interact with the surrounding lipid microenvironment to function. Among the main lipid species that constitute eukaryotic cells, cholesterol has highly dynamic levels under a number of physiopathological conditions. This work describes how plasma membrane cholesterol modulates OCTN2 transport of L-carnitine in human embryonic kidney 293 cells overexpressing OCTN2 (OCTN2-HEK293) and in proteoliposomes harboring human OCTN2. We manipulated the cholesterol content of intact cells, assessed by thin layer chromatography, through short exposures to empty and/or cholesterol-saturated methyl-β-cyclodextrin (mβcd), whereas free cholesterol was used to enrich reconstituted proteoliposomes. We measured OCTN2 transport using [3H]L-carnitine, and expression levels and localization by surface biotinylation and Western blotting. A 20-min preincubation with mβcd reduced the cellular cholesterol content and inhibited L-carnitine influx by 50% in comparison with controls. Analogously, the insertion of cholesterol in OCTN2-proteoliposomes stimulated L-carnitine uptake in a dose-dependent manner. Carnitine uptake in cells incubated with empty mβcd and cholesterol-saturated mβcd to preserve the cholesterol content was comparable with controls, suggesting that the mβcd effect on OCTN2 was cholesterol dependent. Cholesterol stimulated L-carnitine influx in cells by markedly increasing the affinity for L-carnitine and in proteoliposomes by significantly enhancing the affinity for Na+ and, in turn, the L-carnitine maximal transport capacity. Because of the antilipogenic and antioxidant features of L-carnitine, the stimulatory effect of cholesterol on L-carnitine uptake might represent a novel protective effect against lipid-induced toxicity and oxidative stress.

Keywords: L-carnitine; cholesterol; membrane lipid; membrane transport; methyl-β-cyclodextrin; proteoliposomes.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Biological Transport
  • Carnitine / metabolism*
  • Cholesterol / metabolism*
  • HEK293 Cells
  • Humans
  • Proteolipids / metabolism
  • Solute Carrier Family 22 Member 5 / metabolism*

Substances

  • Proteolipids
  • SLC22A5 protein, human
  • Solute Carrier Family 22 Member 5
  • proteoliposomes
  • Cholesterol
  • Carnitine