Summary

Enrichment of Mammalian Tissues and Xenopus Oocytes with Cholesterol

Published: March 25, 2020
doi:

Summary

Two methods of cholesterol enrichment are presented: the application of cyclodextrin saturated with cholesterol to enrich mammalian tissues and cells, and the use of cholesterol-enriched phospholipid-based dispersions (liposomes) to enrich Xenopus oocytes. These methods are instrumental for determining the impact of elevated cholesterol levels in molecular, cellular, and organ function.

Abstract

Cholesterol enrichment of mammalian tissues and cells, including Xenopus oocytes used for studying cell function, can be accomplished using a variety of methods. Here, we describe two important approaches used for this purpose. First, we describe how to enrich tissues and cells with cholesterol using cyclodextrin saturated with cholesterol using cerebral arteries (tissues) and hippocampal neurons (cells) as examples. This approach can be used for any type of tissue, cells, or cell lines. An alternative approach for cholesterol enrichment involves the use of low-density lipoprotein (LDL). The advantage of this approach is that it uses part of the natural cholesterol homeostasis machinery of the cell. However, whereas the cyclodextrin approach can be applied to enrich any cell type of interest with cholesterol, the LDL approach is limited to cells that express LDL receptors (e.g., liver cells, bone marrow-derived cells such as blood leukocytes and tissue macrophages), and the level of enrichment depends on the concentration and the mobility of the LDL receptor. Furthermore, LDL particles include other lipids, so cholesterol delivery is nonspecific. Second, we describe how to enrich Xenopus oocytes with cholesterol using a phospholipid-based dispersion (i.e., liposomes) that includes cholesterol. Xenopus oocytes constitute a popular heterologous expression system used for studying cell and protein function. For both the cyclodextrin-based cholesterol enrichment approach of mammalian tissue (cerebral arteries) and for the phospholipid-based cholesterol enrichment approach of Xenopus oocytes, we demonstrate that cholesterol levels reach a maximum following 5 min of incubation. This level of cholesterol remains constant during extended periods of incubation (e.g., 60 min). Together, these data provide the basis for optimized temporal conditions for cholesterol enrichment of tissues, cells, and Xenopus oocytes for functional studies aimed at interrogating the impact of cholesterol enrichment.

Introduction

Cholesterol, a major cellular lipid, plays numerous critical functional and structural roles1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9. From regulating the physical properties of the plasma membrane to ensuring cell viability, growth, proliferation, and serving as a signaling and precursor molecule in a plethora of biochemical pathways, cholesterol is an imperative component necessary for normal cell and organ function. As a result, cholesterol deficiency results in severe physical malformations and a variety of disorders. On the other hand, even a small increase in cholesterol above physiological levels (2-3x) is cytotoxic1,2,10 and has been associated with the development of disorders, including cardiovascular11,12,13 and neurodegenerative diseases14,15,16,17. Thus, to interrogate the critical functions of cholesterol and to determine the effect of changes in cholesterol levels, different approaches that alter the content of cholesterol in tissues, cells, and Xenopus oocytes have been developed.

Alteration of cholesterol levels in mammalian tissues and cells
Several approaches can be harnessed to decrease the levels of cholesterol in tissues and cells18. One approach involves their exposure to statins dissolved in lipoprotein-deficient serum to inhibit HMG-CoA reductase, which controls the rate of cholesterol synthesis19,20. However, these cholesterol lowering drugs also inhibit the formation of non-sterol products along the mevalonate pathway. Therefore, a small amount of mevalonate is added to allow the formation of these products21 and enhance the specificity of this approach. Another approach for decreasing cholesterol levels involves the use of β-cyclodextrins. These glucopyranose monomers possess an internal hydrophobic cavity with a diameter that matches the size of sterols22, which facilitates the extraction of cholesterol from cells, thereby depleting them from their native cholesterol content23. An example is 2-hydroxypropyl-β-cyclodextrin (HPβCD), a preclinical drug currently being tested for treatment of the Niemann-Pick type C disease, a genetically inherited fatal metabolic disorder characterized by lysosomal cholesterol storage24. The level of cholesterol depletion depends on the specific derivative used. For example, HPβCD extracts cholesterol with a lower capacity than the methylated derivative, methyl-β-cyclodextrin (MβCD)24,25,26,27,28,29,30. Notably, however, β-cyclodextrins can also extract other hydrophobic molecules in addition to cholesterol, which may then result in nonspecific effects31. In contrast to depletion, cells and tissues can be specifically enriched with cholesterol through treatment with β-cyclodextrin that has been presaturated with cholesterol23. This approach can also be used as a control for the specificity of β-cyclodextrins used for cholesterol depletion31. Depletion of cholesterol from tissues and cells is straightforward and can be achieved by exposing the cells for 30-60 min to 5 mM MβCD dissolved in the medium used for storing the cells. This approach can result in a 50% decrease in cholesterol content (e.g., in hippocampal neurons32, rat cerebral arteries33). On the other hand, preparing the β-cyclodextrin-cholesterol complex for cholesterol enrichment of tissue and cells is more complex, and will be described in the protocol section.

An alternative approach to enriching tissues and cells using β-cyclodextrin saturated with cholesterol involves the use of LDL, which relies on LDL receptors expressed in the tissues/cells18. While this approach offers the advantage of using the natural cholesterol homeostasis machinery of the cell, it has several limitations. First, tissues and cells that do not express the LDL receptor cannot be enriched using this approach. Second, LDL particles contain other lipids in addition to cholesterol. Specifically, LDL is comprised of the protein ApoB100 (25%) and the following lipids (75%): ~6-8% cholesterol, ~45-50% cholesteryl ester, ~18-24% phospholipids, and ~4-8% triacylglycerols34. Thus, delivery of cholesterol via LDL particles is nonspecific. Third, the percentage of increase in cholesterol content by LDL in tissues and cells that express the LDL receptor may be significantly lower than the increase observed using cyclodextrin saturated with cholesterol. For example, in a previous study, enrichment of rodent cerebral arteries with cholesterol via LDL resulted in only a 10-15% increase in cholesterol levels35. In contrast, enrichment of these arteries with cyclodextrin saturated with cholesterol as described in the protocol section resulted in >50% increase in the cholesterol content (See Representative Results section, Figure 1).

Alteration of cholesterol levels in Xenopus oocytes
Xenopus oocytes constitute a heterologous expression system commonly used for studying cell and protein function. Earlier studies have shown that the cholesterol to phospholipid molar ratio in Xenopus oocytes is 0.5 ± 0.136. Due to this intrinsic high level of cholesterol, increasing the content of cholesterol in this system is challenging, yet can be achieved using dispersions made from membrane phospholipids and cholesterol. The phospholipids that we have chosen for this purpose are similar to those used for forming artificial planar lipid bilayers and include L-α-phosphatidylethanolamine (POPE) and 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phospho-l-serine (POPS), as described in the protocol section. This approach can result in >50% increase in cholesterol content (See Representative Results section, Figure 2).

An alternative approach to enriching Xenopus oocytes with phospholipid-based dispersions involves the use of cyclodextrin saturated with cholesterol, which is similar to the way tissues and cells are enriched. However, we have found this approach to be of low reproducibility and efficiency, with an average of ~25% increase in cholesterol content. This is possibly due to the different loading capacity of these two approaches (See Representative Results section, Figure 3). In contrast, it has been shown that using cyclodextrin to deplete cholesterol from Xenopus oocytes can result in a ~40% decrease in cholesterol content36.

Here, we focus on cholesterol enrichment of mammalian tissues and cells through the application of cyclodextrin saturated with cholesterol, and of Xenopus oocytes using liposomes. Both approaches can be harnessed to delineate the effect of increased levels of cholesterol on protein function. The mechanisms of cholesterol modulation of protein function may involve direct interactions8 and/or indirect effects9. When cholesterol affects protein function via direct interactions, the effect of an increase in cholesterol levels on protein activity is likely independent of the cell type, expression system, or enrichment approach. For example, we utilized these two approaches to determine the effect of cholesterol on G-protein gated inwardly rectifying potassium (GIRK) channels expressed in atrial myocytes37, hippocampal neurons32,38, HEK29339 cells, and Xenopus oocytes32,37. The results obtained in these studies were consistent: in all three types of mammalian cells and in amphibian oocytes cholesterol upregulated GIRK channel function (see Representative Results section, Figure 4, for hippocampal neurons and the corresponding experiments in Xenopus oocytes). Furthermore, the observations made in these studies were also consistent with the results of studies carried out in atrial myocytes37,40 and hippocampal neurons32,38 freshly isolated from animals subjected to a high cholesterol diet40. Notably, cholesterol enrichment of hippocampal neurons using MβCD reversed the effect of atorvastatin therapy used for addressing the impact of the high cholesterol diet both on cholesterol levels and GIRK function38. In other studies, we investigated the effect of mutations on cholesterol sensitivity of the inwardly rectifying potassium channel Kir2.1 using both Xenopus oocytes and HEK293 cells41. Again, the effect of the mutations on the sensitivity of the channel was similar in the two systems.

The applications of both enrichment methods for determining the impact of elevated cholesterol levels on molecular, cellular, and organ function are numerous. In particular, the use of cyclodextrin-cholesterol complexes to enrich cells and tissues is very common largely due to its specificity. Recent examples of this approach include the determination of the impact of cholesterol on HERG channel activation and underlying mechanisms42, the discovery that cholesterol activates the G protein coupled receptor Smoothened to promote Hedgehog signaling43, and the identification of the role of cholesterol in stem cell biomechanics and adipogenesis through membrane-associated linker proteins44. In our own work, we utilized mammalian tissue enrichment with the MβCD:cholesterol complex to study the effect of cholesterol enrichment on basic function and the pharmacological profile of calcium- and voltage-gated channels of large conductance (BK, MaxiK) in vascular smooth muscle35,45,46. In other studies, we used the phospholipid-based dispersion approach for enriching Xenopus oocytes with cholesterol to determine the roles of different regions in Kir2.1 and GIRK channels in cholesterol sensitivity41,47,48,49, as well as to determine putative cholesterol binding sites in these channels32,50,51.

Protocol

All experimental procedures with animals were performed at the University of Tennessee Health Science Center (UTHSC). The care of animals and experimental protocols were reviewed and approved by the Animal Care and Use Committee of the UTHSC, which is an institution accredited by the Association for Assessment and Accreditation of Laboratory Animal Care International.

1. Enrichment of tissues and cells using methyl-β-cyclodextrin saturated with cholesterol

NOTE: The cholesterol enrichment protocol below is suitable for tissues, cells, and cell lines. As an example, we describe the steps performed for enriching mammalian cerebral arteries. Representative results are provided for both cerebral arteries (Figure 1) and neurons (Figure 4).

  1. Preparation of MβCD saturated with cholesterol
    1. Weigh 0.064 g of MβCD and dissolve it in a flask containing 10 mL of phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) solution to obtain a final concentration of 5 mM MβCD. Stir the solution with a stir bar to ensure that the MβCD is fully dissolved.
    2. Weigh 0.0024 g of cholesterol powder and add it to the same flask to obtain a 0.63 mM cholesterol concentration. Then stir the solution vigorously. Use a spatula to break up as many cholesterol chunks as possible (some chunks will remain until incubation).
    3. Cover the flask with at least two layers of paraffin film and shake slowly (~30 oscillations/min) in a 37 °C water bath overnight. This step is critical.
    4. After 8-16 h, cool the solution to room temperature (RT), and then filter it through a 0.22 μm polyethersulfone syringe filter into a glass bottle.
      NOTE: To reach different cholesterol concentrations in solution, adjust the amounts of both cholesterol and MβCD by simple proportion. It is important to maintain the MβCD:cholesterol molar ratio at 8:1 to obtain saturation of methyl-β-cyclodextrin carrier with cholesterol. The cholesterol-enriching solution can be used immediately or over the course of several days if stored at 4 °C. However, the cholesterol-enriching ability declines over time as the cholesterol aggregates appear, and the solution becomes cloudy.
  2. Treatment of cerebral arteries with MβCD saturated with cholesterol
    1. Euthanize a Sprague Dawley rat (250-300 g) by placing it in a chamber with 2% isoflurane. Then, decapitate the anesthetized rat using a sharp guillotine or a large sharp pair of scissors.
      NOTE: If performing these procedures regularly, it is useful to develop a schedule for guillotine sharpening. Also, a separate pair of scissors should be dedicated for rodent decapitation. Rodent decapitation is a terminal procedure; therefore, the instruments do not have to be sterile. Cleaning with soapy water after each use is sufficient.
    2. Position the rat's head facing forward, away from the researcher. Place the pointed part of a medium sized pair of scissors between the skull and the brain stem, and cut laterally on both sides.
    3. Use forceps to pry the top skull open by pulling up on the base of the skull where the lateral cuts were made and carefully remove the brain. Make sure to cut the optical nerves that hold the brain within the skull.
    4. Put the brain in a beaker with PBS on ice after removal.
      NOTE: The brain can be stored on ice for 4-6 h at 4 °C.
    5. In a nonsterile environment transfer the rat brain to a waxed dissection bowl with enough PBS to submerge it. Pin the brain down to keep it from moving.
      NOTE: Step 1.2.5 can be carried out at RT if performed quickly. Otherwise, it needs to be done on ice.
    6. Use sharp forceps and small surgical scissors to dissect the cerebral arteries and their branches that form the Circle of Willis at the base of the brain under the microscope in PBS at RT. Be gentle when dissecting to ensure that the artery tissue is not stretched or cut. This step is critical.
    7. Briefly rinse the artery segments (up to 1 cm long) in PBS either in a 96 well plate or in a 35 mm dish to remove the leftover blood, and then place them for 10 min into enough of the cholesterol-enriching solution (prepared in step 1.1) to cover the entire artery segments. Use a 35 mm dish if there is an ample amount of cholesterol-enriching solution and a 96 well plate if the arteries are small or if there is a shortage of cholesterol-enriching solution.
      NOTE: The same approach can be used to enrich other tissues and cells with cholesterol using a 60 min incubation time. For example, this approach has been previously used for cholesterol enrichment of mouse cerebral arteries35,45, hippocampal neurons32, atrial myocytes37, and HEK 293 cells39. The minimal incubation time needs to be determined for each tissue or cell type based on the validation of cholesterol enrichment at different time points with a cholesterol-sensitive assay (e.g., the biochemical determination of the amount of cholesterol in the tissue by staining with the cholesterol-sensitive fluorescence dye filipin).
  3. Stain the artery tissue with the steroid-sensitive fluorescence dye filipin to determine any alterations in cholesterol levels.
    NOTE: In the Representative Results section, we demonstrate the results of two approaches to assess changes in cholesterol levels: a biochemical assay performed through the application of a commercially available cholesterol oxidase-based kit (see Table of Materials) and staining with the steroid-sensitive fluorescence dye filipin. The first approach can be performed by following the manufacturer's instructions. The protocol for the latter approach is provided below.
    1. Using a fresh bottle of filipin powder, prepare a 10 mg/mL stock solution in dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO). This step is critical.
      NOTE: The resulting solution is light-sensitive. If prepared correctly, the filipin stock solution is yellowish. Some filipin powder may stick to the bottle cap. Therefore, it is important to rinse the bottle and cap with DMSO solvent to retain the entire amount of filipin. Once prepared, filipin stock must be used within several days. Filipin completely loses its fluorescence ability after 5 days, even when stored in the dark at -20 °C.
    2. Remove the artery segments from the cholesterol-enriching solution and wash them 3x with PBS for 5 min.
    3. Fix the artery segments in 4% paraformaldehyde for 15 min on ice.
      CAUTION: Paraformaldehyde is light-sensitive. Therefore, work must be carried out in the dark.
    4. Place the artery segments into 0.5% Triton in PBS at RT for 10 min to permeabilize the tissue and facilitate dye penetration.
    5. Wash the artery segments 3x with PBS for 5 min on a shaker. This step is critical.
      NOTE: When the Triton has been completely washed out, there should not be any bubbles on the surface of the PBS solution.
    6. Dilute the filipin stock solution in PBS to a final concentration of 25 μg/mL. Remove the arteries form the PBS solution and place them in the diluted filipin solution for 1 h in the dark. This step is critical.
    7. Wash out the filipin by rinsing the artery segments 3x with PBS for 5 min on a shaker. This step is critical.
    8. Rinse the artery segments briefly with distilled water, absorb excessive liquid with a paper napkin, and mount the arteries on a slide using commercially available mounting media (see Table of Materials).
    9. Cover the artery with a coverslip avoiding rolling or twisting of the artery and set the slides to dry in a dark area at RT for 24 h.
    10. After the mounting media dries, seal the coverslip edges with clear nail polish, and leave the nail polish to dry for 10-15 min. Store the slides in the dark at -20 °C.
    11. Equilibrate the slides to RT before imaging.
    12. Image the tissue with a fluorescence microscope or a fluorescence reader with the excitation set at 340-380 nm and emission at 385-470 nm.
      CAUTION: Filipin photobleaches quickly; thus, samples have to be imaged promptly.

2. Enrichment of Xenopus oocytes using cholesterol-enriched phospholipid-based dispersions (liposomes)

  1. Preparation of solutions
    1. To prepare a stock solution of cholesterol, dissolve 10 mg of cholesterol powder in 1 mL of chloroform in a 10 mL glass beaker or bottle. Transfer the solution into a 1.5 mL capped glass bottle.
      CAUTION: In view of the toxicity and rapid evaporation of chloroform, work in the hood and keep reagents on ice.
    2. Prepare a 150 mM KCl, 10 mM Tris-HEPES, pH = 7.4 buffer for cholesterol-enriched phospholipids. To do so, dissolve in an Erlenmeyer flask 5.5905 g of KCl and 0.6057 g of Tris in double-distilled water to a total of 0.5 L volume. In another flask, dissolve 5.5905 g of KCl and 1.19155 g of HEPES in double-distilled water to a total of 0.5 L volume. Mix the two solutions together in a 1 L Erlenmeyer flask, and adjust the pH to 7.4 with HCl.
      NOTE: Store the resulting 150 mM KCl, 10 mM Tris-HEPES solution at 4 °C.
    3. To prepare ND96 pre-medium oocyte culturing (low K+, low Ca2+) buffer, combine 1 mL of 2 M KCl, 1 mL of 1 M MgCl2, 45.5 mL of 2 M NaCl, and 5 mL of 1/1 M NaOH-HEPES in a 1 L Erlenmeyer flask. Add 900 mL double-distilled water and adjust the pH to 7.4 with HCl. Transfer the solution to a 1 L cylinder and bring the volume to 1 L with double-distilled water. Then add 1.8 mL of 1 M CaCl2 and filter the solution.
      NOTE: Slight variations in the ratios between the components used to make an ND96 solution do not seem to be critical for cholesterol enrichment, possibly because the ND96 solution is not used during the enrichment step itself but for storage. An example is a 1 L solution that has a slightly lower concentration of sodium and chloride ions, and is made by combining 2 mL of 1 M KCl, 1 mL of 1 M MgCl2, 82.5 mL of 1 M NaCl, 5 mL of 1 M HEPES, and 1.8 mL of 1 M CaCl2 (Ca2+ is omitted to obtain a Ca2+ free solution). Adjust the pH of the solution to 7.4 with NaOH. Store the resulting ND96 oocyte culturing solution at 4 °C for up to 1 month.
  2. Preparation of the phospholipid-based dispersion with cholesterol liposomes
    1. In a 12 mL glass tube, combine 200 μL of each of the following 10 mg/mL chloroform-dissolved lipid solutions: L-α-phosphatidylethanolamine, 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phospho-l-serine, and cholesterol.
    2. Evaporate the chloroform in the hood to dry slowly under a stream of nitrogen. This step is critical.
    3. Suspend the lipids in 800 μL of buffered solution consisting of 150 mM KCl and 10 mM Tris-HEPES at pH = 7.4, and cover with paraffin film.
    4. Sonicate gently at 80 kHz for 10 min until a milky mixture is formed. This step is critical.
      CAUTION: When sonicating, the dispersion in the glass tube should vibrate gently, forming small waves. Drops of dispersion should not be jumping within the tube.
  3. Enriching Xenopus oocytes with cholesterol
    NOTE: Frog oocyte-containing ovaries can be obtained from two sources: First, Xenopus laevis female frogs can be housed for the purpose of in-house surgery. This procedure must be approved by the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee. Second, whole ovaries can be purchased from commercial suppliers. As an alternative to purchasing or isolating whole ovaries and then digesting them as described in steps 2.3.1-2.3.4, individual oocytes are available commercially for purchase. If the latter are used, steps 2.3.1-2.3.4 can be skipped.
    1. Keep the freshly obtained ovaries at ~14 °C in an ND96 solution. Under these conditions, the ovaries can be stored for up to 1 week.
    2. To obtain individual oocytes, disrupt the ovarian sac in multiple places using sharp forceps. Place the ovary chunks into a 60 mm plate, with 5 mL of Ca2+-free ND96 supplemented with 0.5 mg/mL collagenase. Shake on an orbital shaker at 60 oscillations/min for 15 min at RT.
      NOTE: This step will ensure the digestion of the ovarian sac. To preserve enzymatic activity, avoid storing collagenase containing ND96 for extended periods of time (>1 h). Even brief storage should be performed at cool temperatures of under 15 °C.
    3. Using a transfer pipette with a wide tip, vigorously pipette the oocyte-containing solution up and down approximately 5-10x to separate individual oocytes. At this step, the solution will turn dark.
    4. Quickly rinse the oocytes with Ca2+-free ND96 until the solution becomes transparent.
    5. Transfer individual oocytes to Ca2+-containing ND-96 solution supplemented with 2 mg/mL of gentamicin using a transfer pipette with a narrow tip.
      NOTE: This step is essential when it is necessary to store the oocytes. Individual oocytes can be stored in an incubator for several days at 14-17 °C. However, dead oocytes that are whitish must be removed at least once a day to avoid contamination of the solution with toxic chemicals.
    6. Transfer 90 μL of the cholesterol-enriched phospholipid-based dispersion into one well of a 96 well plate.
    7. Transfer up to six oocytes from the ND96 medium to the well with as little medium as possible. This step is critical.
      CAUTION: Do not expose the oocytes to the air during the transfer to keep the oocytes intact.
    8. Place the 96 well plate on a three-dimensional platform rotator to provide a small orbital motion to the oocytes in the cell for 5-10 min.
    9. Add a drop of ND96 into the well, and transfer the cholesterol-enriched oocytes from the 96 well plate to a 35 mm plate with ND96 for immediate use. This step is critical.
    10. Use a commercially available cholesterol oxidase-based kit (see Table of Materials) to assess changes in cholesterol levels by following the manufacturer's instructions.

Representative Results

The use of cyclodextrin saturated with cholesterol as a means for enriching tissues and cells with cholesterol is well established. Here, we first demonstrate the application of this widely used approach for enriching rat cerebral arteries with cholesterol using MβCD saturated with cholesterol. Figure 1A shows an example of an imaged cerebral artery smooth muscle layer and demonstrates the concentration-dependent increase in filipin-associated fluorescence obtained upon tissue enrichment with increasing concentrations of cholesterol ranging from 6.25 μM-6.25 mM for 1 h. Corresponding quantification of the imaging data is depicted in Figure 1B. Notably, the increase in cholesterol levels 2 h after the 1 h incubation period was ~50% of the increase observed immediately after the treatment with the MβCD:cholesterol complex. As Figure 1C demonstrates for the sample treated with 0.625 mM cholesterol for 1 h, functional studies using the treated tissues need to be carried out as soon as possible after cholesterol enrichment is completed. Furthermore, while a 1 h incubation time is commonly used to enrich tissues and cells with cholesterol using this approach, 5 min of incubation is usually sufficient to achieve a statistically significant increase in cerebral artery cholesterol content as determined by a cholesterol oxidase-based biochemical assay, as depicted in Figure 1D. The increase in cholesterol content remained at the same level when the incubation time was increased to 60 min (Figure 1D).

The effectiveness of cholesterol-enriched liposomes as a means to enrich Xenopus oocytes with cholesterol is demonstrated in Figure 2A-C. While no significant change was observed in cholesterol levels in control phospholipid-based dispersions lacking cholesterol (Figure 2A), cholesterol levels increased significantly after only 5 min of treatment with the phospholipid-based dispersions that included cholesterol, and remained at the same level when the incubation time was increased to 60 min (Figure 2B). A similar effect was observed in two different batches of oocytes that were obtained from two frogs. Notably, however, both the initial levels of cholesterol and the change in cholesterol content varied among the two batches: in batch 1, the initial concentration of cholesterol was 64 μg of cholesterol per mg of protein, whereas the initial concentration in batch 2 was 45 μg of cholesterol per mg of protein, which is ~70% of the initial levels of cholesterol in batch 1. Subsequent to a 60 min treatment, the concentration of cholesterol in batch 1 was 124 μg of cholesterol per mg of protein, whereas in batch 2 it was 67 μg of cholesterol per mg of protein. Thus, whereas the concentration of cholesterol increased by over ~90% in batch 1, it increased by ~50% in batch 2. Nevertheless, the substantial increase in cholesterol levels in both batches provides the means to investigate the effect of an increase in cholesterol levels on the function of proteins expressed in this heterologous expression system. Furthermore, the phospholipid-based dispersion approach for enriching Xenopus oocytes with cholesterol seems to be more effective than the application of cyclodextrin saturated with cholesterol as done in tissues and cells. As Figure 3 demonstrates, application of cyclodextrin-cholesterol complexes to enrich oocytes using 5mM cyclodextrin resulted in an average of only ~25% increase in cholesterol levels.

The effectiveness of the cyclodextrin-based approach for enriching cells is also demonstrated in neurons freshly isolated from the CA1 region of the hippocampus (Figure 4A). As Figure 4B shows, incubation of the neurons in MβCD saturated with cholesterol for 60 min resulted in over 2x increase in cholesterol levels as determined by the filipin-associated fluorescence. Using this approach, we tested the effect of the increase in cholesterol on GIRK channels expressed in hippocampal neurons. As Figure 4C demonstrates, this change in cholesterol levels resulted in a significant increase in GIRK currents. Similarly, we tested the effect of cholesterol enrichment on the primary GIRK subunit expressed in the brain, GIRK2, using the Xenopus oocytes heterologous expression system. To this end, we overexpressed GIRK2^ (GIRK2_E152D), a pore mutant of GIRK2 that increases its membrane expression and activity52 de Xenopus oocytes, and enriched the oocytes with cholesterol for 60 min using the phospholipid-based dispersion approach. As Figures 4D-F demonstrate, the increase in cholesterol levels resulted in a significant increase in currents similar to the effect of increased cholesterol levels in neurons on GIRK channel function. These data further demonstrate the effectiveness, consistency, and utility of the two approaches described above for determining the impact of increased cholesterol levels on protein activity and cellular function.

Figure 1
Figure 1: Representative enrichment of rat cerebral arteries with cholesterol using methyl-β-cyclodextrin saturated with cholesterol. (A) An example of an imaged cerebral artery smooth muscle layer demonstrating the concentration-dependent increase in filipin-associated fluorescence obtained upon tissue enrichment with increasing concentrations of cholesterol ranging from 6.25 μM-6.25 mM for 1 h. (B) Quantification of the imaging data in (A). Fluorescence intensity measurement of the entire image was performed using the built-in "Measurement" function in commercial software. At each cholesterol concentration, ≥3 images were collected from arteries that were harvested from separate animal donors. For each cholesterol concentration, data are presented as the mean ± standard error. (C) Cholesterol levels in cerebral artery smooth muscle layer segments immediately after a 1 h incubation period with 0.625 mM cholesterol, and 3 h subsequent to the beginning of the treatment (i.e., 1 h of incubation followed by 2 h in PBS). (D) Dependence of cholesterol levels on the incubation time as determined by a cholesterol oxidase-based biochemical assay. A significant difference is indicated by an asterisk (*p ≤ 0.05). Panels (A) (cholesterol concentrations 0 mM-0.625 mM), (B), and (C) have been modified from North et al.45. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.

Figure 2
Figure 2: Representative enrichment of Xenopus oocytes with cholesterol using liposomes. (A) Fold change in cholesterol levels of control Xenopus oocytes incubated in cholesterol-free liposomes for 5-60 min. (B) Fold change in cholesterol levels of Xenopus oocytes incubated in cholesterol-enriched liposomes for 5-60 min. The depicted control bar refers to incubation in cholesterol-free liposomes for 5 min and is shown as a comparison. (C) Comparison of the effect of cholesterol enrichment of two different batches of Xenopus oocytes using cholesterol-enriched liposomes for 5 and 60 min. A significant difference is indicated by an asterisk (*p ≤ 0.05). Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.

Figure 3
Figure 3: Representative enrichment of Xenopus oocytes with cholesterol using methyl-β-cyclodextrin saturated with cholesterol. (A) Fold change in cholesterol levels of control Xenopus oocytes incubated in control ND96 media for 5-60 min. (B) Fold change in cholesterol levels of Xenopus oocytes incubated in MβCD saturated with cholesterol for 5-60 min. The depicted control bar refers to incubation in control media for 5 min and is shown as a comparison. A significant difference is indicated by an asterisk (*p ≤ 0.05). Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.

Figure 4
Figure 4: Representative examples of studies of cholesterol enrichment on protein function in cells and Xenopus oocytes: the impact of cholesterol on G-protein inwardly rectifying potassium channels. (A) Filipin-associated fluorescence signal of hippocampal CA1 pyramidal neuron from rats on control (left) versus cholesterol-enriched (right). (B) Summary data of filipin-associated fluorescence signals obtained from control and cholesterol-enriched freshly isolated hippocampal CA1 pyramidal neurons. Cholesterol enrichment was achieved by incubating the neurons in MβCD saturated with cholesterol for 1 h (n = 12-14). (C) Ionic current (I)-voltage(V) curve depicting the effect of cholesterol enrichment as described in (B) on GIRK currents in hippocampal neurons from the CA1 region. (D) Representative traces showing the effect of cholesterol enrichment using cholesterol-enriched phospholipid-based liposomes on GIRK2^ (GIRK2_E152D) expressed in Xenopus oocytes at -80 mV and +80 mV. (E) Summary data of (D) at -80 mV (n = 6-9). A significant difference is indicated by an asterisk (*p ≤ 0.05). Subfigures (B-E) have been modified from Bukiya et al.32. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.

Discussion

Methods to enrich mammalian tissues and cells and Xenopus oocytes with cholesterol constitute a powerful tool for investigating the effect of elevated cholesterol levels on individual molecular species, on complex macromolecular systems (e.g., proteins), and on cellular and organ function. In this paper, we have described two complementary approaches that facilitate such studies. First, we described how to enrich tissues and cells with cholesterol using MβCD saturated with cholesterol. We demonstrated that in cerebral artery segments, this approach resulted in an increase of ~50% in cholesterol levels. Furthermore, in a recent study, we showed that the same approach leads to an over 2x increase in cholesterol content in hippocampal neurons from the CA1 region. In contrast, however, employing this approach as a means to enrich Xenopus oocytes resulted in only ~25% increase in cholesterol content in Xenopus oocytes. Thus, for enriching Xenopus oocytes, we have developed a phospholipid-based dispersion approach that consistently results in at least ~50% increase in cholesterol levels. It is possible that the advantage of this approach for enriching Xenopus oocytes stems from an enhanced loading capacity compared to the loading capacity of the MβCD:cholesterol complex approach. It is also possible that while the MβCD:cholesterol complex approach is optimized for enriching tissues and cells, further optimization of the protocol is required to improve its application for enriching Xenopus oocytes.

The phospholipid-based dispersion used to enrich Xenopus oocytes with cholesterol includes two lipids that are widely used to create planar lipid bilayers (i.e., L-α-phosphatidylethanolamine and 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phospho-l-serine). However, in an earlier study, it was shown that Xenopus oocytes could also be enriched using cholesterol from liposomes that included phosphatidylcholine and cholate36. This method resulted in an increase in the cholesterol/phospholipid molar ratio in the plasma membrane from 0.5 ± 0.1 to 0.9 ± 0.1 with an average percentage of enrichment of 71%. This average percentage of enrichment is very similar to the average level of increase in cholesterol content that we observed (~70.5%), suggesting that the choice of phospholipids used to form the dispersion is not critical for enriching Xenopus oocytes with cholesterol using this approach.

Each protocol described involves several critical steps. After preparing an MβCD:cholesterol mixture at an 8:1 molar ratio to ensure the saturation of MβCD with cholesterol, it is critical to cover the flask with at least two layers of paraffin film and set it in a slowly shaking 37 °C water bath overnight. When dissecting tissues for cholesterol treatment it is important to be gentle to ensure that the tissue is not stretched or cut. After permeabilizing the tissue to facilitate dye penetration, it is critical to thoroughly wash the tissue segments in PBS. Tissue staining in fillipin needs to be performed in the dark, and the fillipin needs to be meticulously washed out after the staining is completed. When preparing cholesterol-enriched phospholipid-based dispersions, it is critical to ensure that the dispersion in the glass tube vibrates gently, forming small waves, to avoid separation of the cholesterol from the dispersion. For cholesterol treatment of Xenopus oocytes, it is important to transfer the oocytes from the ND96 medium to the well with the cholesterol-enriched phospholipid-based dispersion with as little medium as possible while not exposing the oocytes to air to keep the oocytes intact. It is important to note that due to the intrinsic machinery in tissues, cells, and Xenopus oocytes, cholesterol levels may equilibrate, and then return back to their original levels over time. Consequently, functional studies need to be carried out immediately after the incubation time. Here, we have demonstrated this notion in cerebral arteries enriched with cholesterol, showing that the increase in cholesterol levels 2 h after a 1 h incubation period was approximately half of the increase observed immediately after the incubation period.

Despite following the critical steps described above, several challenges may arise. For example, an increase in cholesterol levels may not be observed following the cholesterol-enriching treatment. If this is the case, it may be necessary to increase the concentration of cholesterol in the cholesterol-enriching media. The same applies for cholesterol enrichment of tissues, cells, and Xenopus oocytes. However, in the preparation of treatments using the MβCD:cholesterol complex approach, the amount of MβCD should be increased with the increase in cholesterol concentration to maintain an 8:1 molar ratio with cholesterol. Additionally, it may be necessary to prepare a fresh cholesterol-enriching solution, because cholesterol tends to precipitate out of the solution, and the solution loses its cholesterol-enriching efficiency. Subsequent to cholesterol enrichment, it is possible that a filipin signal will not be observed. If this is the case, it may be necessary to use a fresh filipin powder to prepare a new stock and repeat the experiment. Filipin fluorescence declines quickly, and the stock solution cannot be stored for more than several days. One limitation of filipin staining is that it seems to recognize steroids other than cholesterol. For instance, we have recently demonstrated an increase in the filipin-associated fluorescence signal in rat cerebral arteries following enrichment with coprostanol45. Thus, filipin staining results should be interpreted with caution, and when in doubt, alternative approaches should be employed to corroborate the results. One possibility would be to perform a biochemical assay through the application of a commercially available cholesterol oxidase-based kit.

In summary, the presented approaches are very effective in achieving cholesterol enrichment of close to or exceeding 50%. Indeed, the MβCD:cholesterol complex approach that results in ~50% in cholesterol levels in cerebral arteries is much more efficient than using LDL to enrich these tissues, which results in a mere ~10% increase in cholesterol35. The same applies to the application of cholesterol-enriched phospholipid-based dispersions (liposomes) to enrich Xenopus oocytes. As described above, this approach consistently results in at least a 50% increase in cholesterol levels. Importantly, these two approaches for cholesterol enrichment in vitro yield results that are comparable with the cholesterol increase obtained by subjecting the animals to a high cholesterol diet32,37,40,53,54. Moreover, in contrast to weeks-long high cholesterol diets, in vitro approaches require just a few minutes of incubation time to reach a statistically significant and steady-state increase in cholesterol level.

Divulgations

The authors have nothing to disclose.

Acknowledgements

This work was supported by a Scientist Development Grant (11SDG5190025) from the American Heart Association (to A.R.-D.), and by National Institute of Health R01 grants AA-023764 (to A.N.B.), and HL-104631 and R37 AA-11560 (to A.M.D).

Materials

Amplex Red Cholesterol Assay Kit Invitrogen A12216
Pierce BCA Protein Assay Kit Thermo Scientific 23225
Pre-Diluted Protein Assay Standards BSA set Thermo Scientific 23208
Brain PE 25Mg in Chloroform Avanti Lipids 840022C
16:0-18:1 PS 25Mg Chloroform Avanti Lipids 840034C
Cholesterol 100Mg Powder Sigma C8667
KCl Fisher P217
Trizma base Sigma T6066
HEPES Corning 61-034-RO
MgCl2 Fisher M33
NaCl Fisher S271
KH2PO4 Fisher P285
MgSO4 EMD Chemicals MX0070-1
EDTA VWR E177
Dextrose Anhydrous Fisher BP350
NaHCO3 Sigma S6014
CaCl2 Sigma C3881
Blood Gas Tank nexAir
NaOH Fisher S318
1.5mL tubes Fisher S35818
Gastight Syringe 100uL Hamilton 1710
Microliter Syringe 25uL Hamilton 702
12 mL heavy duty conical centrifuge beaded rim tube Pyrex 8120-12
Chloroform Fisher C298
Support Stand Homescience Tools CE-STAN5X8
Universal Clamp, 3-Prong Homescience Tools CE-CLPUNIV
Sonicator Laboratory Supplies G112SP1G
3D rotator mixer Benchmark Scientific B3D 1308
96 well plate Sigma BR781602
N2 gas nexAir
Glass beakers 40ml-1L Fisher 02-540
Ice Machine Scotsman CU1526MA-1
Ice bucket Fisher 50-136-7764
1X PBS Corning 21-031-CM
TritonX Fisher BP151-100
Sonic Dismembrator Fisher Model 100
Eppendorf microcentrifuge Eppendorf Model 5417R
Amber bottles Fisher 03-251-420
Corning™ Disposable Glass Pasteur Pipets FIsher 13-678-4A
Parafilm FIsher 50-998-944
Isotemp™ BOD Refrigerated Incubator FIsher 97-990E
Oocytes Xenoocyte™ 10005
Rat Envigo Sprague Dawley weight 250g
Methyl-β-cyclodextrin Sigma C4555
Water bath incubator with shaker Precision 51221080 Lowest shaker setting O/N 37 °C
Filipin Sigma SAE0088-1ML
DMSO Fisher BP231
Paraformaldehyde 4% Mallinckrodt 2621
DI H2O University DI source
ProLong Gold antifade reagnet Invitrogen P10144
Microslides 75x25mm Frosted Diagger G15978A
Forceps Fine Science Tools 11255-20
Microscope Coverslip Diagger G15972B
Clear nail polish Revlon 771 Clear
Labeling Tape Fisher 15-901-20F
Securline Lab Marker II Sigma Z648205-5EA
BD 10mL Syringe Fisher 14-823-16E
1.2 μm syringe filter VWR 28150-958
KimWipes Fisher 06-666A
pH probe Sartorus py-p112s
pH meter Denver instrument Model 225
70% ETOH Pharmco 211USP/NF
Timer Fisher 02-261-840
Steno book Staples 163485

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Slayden, A., North, K., Bisen, S., Dopico, A. M., Bukiya, A. N., Rosenhouse-Dantsker, A. Enrichment of Mammalian Tissues and Xenopus Oocytes with Cholesterol. J. Vis. Exp. (157), e60734, doi:10.3791/60734 (2020).

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