Cellular Localization and Trafficking of the Human ABCA1 Transporter* 210

ABCA1, the ATP-binding cassette protein mutated in Tangier disease, mediates the efflux of excess cellular sterol to apoA-I and thereby the formation of high density lipoprotein. The intracellular localization and trafficking of ABCA1 was examined in stably and transiently transfected HeLa cells expressing a functional human ABCA1-green fluorescent protein (GFP) fusion protein. The fluorescent chimeric ABCA1 transporter was found to reside on the cell surface and on intracellular vesicles that include a novel subset of early endosomes, as well as late endosomes and lysosomes. Studies of the localization and trafficking of ABCA1-GFP in the presence of brefeldin A or monensin, agents known to block intracellular vesicular trafficking, as well as apoA-I-mediated cellular lipid efflux, showed that: (i) ABCA1 functions in lipid efflux at the cell surface, and (ii) delivery of ABCA1 to lysosomes for degradation may serve as a mechanism to modulate its surface expression. Time-lapse fluorescence microscopy revealed that ABCA1-GFP-containing early endosomes undergo fusion, fission, and tubulation and transiently interact with one another, late endocytic vesicles, and the cell surface. These studies establish a complex intracellular trafficking pathway for human ABCA1 that may play important roles in modulating ABCA1 transporter activity and cellular cholesterol homeostasis.