|
|
||||||||
1From the Departments of Ophthalmology, 3Biochemistry and Molecular Genetics, and 4Nutritional Biochemistry and Genomics, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, Alabama.
| Abstract |
|---|
|
|
|---|
METHODS. Particles isolated from paired choroids of human donors were subjected to comprehensive lipid profiling (preparative liquid chromatography [LC] gas chromatography [GC]), thin-layer chromatography (TLC), high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC), Western blot analysis, and negative stain electron microscopy. Results were compared to plasma lipoproteins isolated from normolipemic volunteers and to conditioned medium from RPE-J cells supplemented with palmitate to induce particle synthesis and secretion.
RESULTS. EC was the largest component (32.4 ± 7.9 mol%) of BrM-LLP lipids. EC was 11.3-fold more abundant than triglyceride (TG), unlike large apoB lipoproteins in plasma. Of the fatty acids (FA) esterified to cholesterol, linoleate (18:2n6) was the most abundant (41.7 ± 4.7 mol%). Retinyl ester (RE) was detectable at picomolar levels in BrM-LLP. Notably scarce in any BrM-LLP lipid class was the photoreceptor-abundant FA docosahexaenoate (DHA, 22:6n3). RPE-J cells synthesized apoB and numerous EC-rich spherical particles.
CONCLUSIONS. BrM-LLP composition resembles plasma LDL more than it does photoreceptors. An EC-rich core is possible for newly synthesized lipoproteins as well as those processed in plasma. Abundant EC could contribute to a transport barrier in aging and lesion formation in age-related maculopathy (ARM). Analysis of BrM-LLP composition has revealed new aspects of retinal cholesterol and retinoid homeostasis.
Lipoproteins are naturally occurring nanoparticles composed of lipid and protein held together by noncovalent forces. Each particle is a microemulsion consisting of a surface of phospholipids (PLs), unesterified cholesterol (UC), and apolipoproteins and a core of neutral lipids, principally esterified cholesterol (EC) and triglyceride (TG). Lipoprotein classes differ in relative amount of lipids, protein/lipid ratio, and apolipoprotein species present, resulting in differences in size, density, and electrophoretic mobility. Lipoprotein classes containing apoB are chylomicrons (CM; from intestine), very-low-density lipoproteins (VLDL; from liver), and LDL (metabolite of VLDL). ApoB lipoproteins must be properly lipidated by their source cells in order for particle maturation and secretion to proceed. Core lipid composition reflects the availability of input FA and the substrate preferences of catalytic enzymes in upstream pathways.4
From late adolescence through senescence, BrM in normal human eyes markedly accumulates histochemically detectable EC associated with abundant 60- to 80-nm-diameter solid lipoprotein–like particles (LLP).5 6 7 8 Further, drusen contain EC, UC, and immunoreactivity for apos A-I, B, C-I, C-II, and E.9 This deposition is not necessarily attributable to the systemic aging phenomenon by which EC from LDL accumulates in connective tissues, including arterial intima and cornea.10 Rather, recent evidence implicates EC as part of an apoB lipoprotein constitutively produced within the eye by the RPE and secreted into BrM, where it participates in ARM progression. Native human RPE expresses apolipoprotein mRNA transcripts, the proteins of apos B-100 and E, and notably, microsomal triglyceride transfer protein (MTP), required for apoB secretion and the product of the abetalipoproteinemia gene.11 12 Isolated BrM-LLP segregate into the appropriate band of a density gradient but differ from plasma lipoproteins in cholesterol profile.13 Cultured RPE secretes apoE, primarily into a high-density fraction.14
Size and lipid composition are strongly related for apoB lipoproteins, in that particles >25 nm diameter (CM and VLDL) have TG-rich cores and smaller particles (including LDL) have EC-rich cores.15 BrM-LLP, as large as VLDL or small CM, are expected to be TG-rich. Indeed, an early assay of BrM/choroid indicated 1.77-fold more moles TG than EC.16 However, other studies in which polarizing microscopy in tissue sections6 and enzymatic assay in isolated particles13 were used indicate that EC predominates over TG by at least threefold. To facilitate insight into the biological function of BrM-LLP and improve understanding of the lipids available to form the characteristic ARM extracellular lesions, we used comprehensive profiling of neutral lipid, PL, and retinoid components of BrM-LLP isolated from human donor eyes, comparing these results to plasma apoB lipoproteins and the secreta of an RPE cell line.
| Methods |
|---|
|
|
|---|
1.21 g/mL, lipoprotein-containing, called the top fraction) and infranatant (d > 1.21 g/mL, lipoprotein-sparse, called the bottom fraction) were withdrawn (Fig. 1B) for various assays.
|
|
4 postprandial hours, was pooled to maximize the CM sample. Lipoproteins were isolated as described.13
One-Dimensional Thin Layer Chromatography (TLC)
Lipids were extracted from BrM-LLP, BrM remainders, medium, and cells by using chloroform-methanol (2:1 vol/vol).18 Aliquots of organic phase were evaporated under nitrogen, resolubilized in chloroform, and applied to TLC plates (LHPKD silica gel 60A, Whatman, Florham Park, NJ) as described.12 For separation of EC, TG, UC, FA, PE, and PC, plates were developed in petroleum ether:diethyl ether:acetic acid (84:15:1). For greater separation of PL and sphingomyelin (SPM), plates were developed in chloroform: methanol: ammonium hydroxide (65:25:4). Plates were sprayed with 3% copper acetate in 8% phosphoric acid solution and heated to reveal bands. Standards were chloroform-solubilized 1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine, oleate, triolein, cholesteryl oleate, SPM (esterified to mostly palmitate, 16:0), and UC (SPM from Avanti Polar Lipids, Alabaster AL; others from Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, MO). For semiquantitative assessment, plates were scanned, bands were defined within contrast-inverted images, and band intensities were measured (IPLab; BioVision Technologies, Exton, PA).
Comprehensive Lipid Profiling
BrM-LLP, plasma lipoproteins, and BrM/choroids were characterized by Lipomics (West Sacramento, CA) using preparative liquid chromatography (LC), gas chromatography (GC), and flame ionization detection. Lipids were extracted18 in the presence of authentic internal standards. Individual lipid classes within each extract were separated by LC (model 1100 series; Agilent Technologies, Palo Alto, CA). Each lipid class was transesterified in 1% sulfuric acid in methanol in a sealed vial under nitrogen at 100°C for 45 minutes. Resulting FA methyl esters were extracted with hexane containing 0.05% butylated hydroxytoluene and prepared for GC by sealing the hexane extracts under nitrogen. FA methyl esters were separated and quantified by capillary GC (model 6890; Agilent Technologies) equipped with a 30-m capillary column (DB-88MS; Agilent Technologies) and a flame-ionization detector.
HPLC for Retinoids
Two 50-µL aliquots were taken of samples of BrM-LLP and plasma lipoproteins and handled under safelight conditions. The first, assayed for unesterified retinol, was mixed with 0.6 mL water and 1.5 mL ethanol and then extracted twice with a double volume of hexane. The second aliquot, assayed for unesterified retinol plus RE, was treated with 1.5 mL 5% potassium hydroxide in ethanol for 15 minutes at 65°C to permit RE hydrolysis and extracted as just described. The difference between unesterified retinol and total retinol accounted for the retinol released by hydrolysis from RE. Extracts were dried under nitrogen and resolubilized in 200 µL of HPLC mobile phase. Reversed-phase separation was performed using a separation module (model 2695; Waters, Milford, MA) with a photograph diode array detector (model 2996; Waters) and a silica-based column (Supelcosil Suplex; pKB100 column; 250 x 4.6 mm, 5 µM; Sigma-Aldrich) equipped with a C18 guard column (Symmetry; Waters).The isocratic mobile phase consisted of 79% acetonitrile, 16% 0.25 M ammonium acetate, 3% glacial acetic acid, and 2% methanol. The flow rate was 0.7 mL/min. Chromatograms were extracted at 325 nm. Retinol peaks were identified by matching spectra and elution times to those of retinol standards. Under-the-curve areas of retinol peaks were converted to molar content using calibration coefficients obtained by separating retinol standards of known concentrations under the same conditions. Plasma lipoprotein RE contents (Supplementary Table S1, column 12, http://www.iovs.org/cgi/content/full/50/2/870/DC1) were comparable to values reported for postprandial normolipemic subjects19 (i.e., high in CM, moderate in VLDL, and low to trace in LDL).
Cell Culture, Secretion, and Immunoprecipitation
RPE-J cells (from American Type Culture Collection, Manassas, VA) were used for secretion after two passages. The cells were cultured in T-75 flasks at 33°C and 5% CO2 for 6 days in DMEM and 4% fetal calf serum. Although the long-chain FA oleate is typically used to elicit apoB secretion from hepatoma cells,20 preliminary experiments indicated that RPE-J responded better to palmitate. Serum-free DMEM containing 0.2 µM palmitate bound to 1.5% FA free-BSA was warmed to 33°C and added into flasks. To detect newly synthesized apoB, 10 mL serum- and methionine-free DMEM containing 100 µL [35S]-methionine (10.5 µCi/µL) were also added. After 4 hours, medium was replaced with serum-free DMEM and incubated for another 4 hours. The medium was centrifuged at 5000 rpm for 5 minutes to remove cellular debris, and the supernatant was subjected to density gradient ultracentrifugation before TLC, electron microscopy,13 or immunoprecipitation, as follows. The cells were washed with cold PBS, and protein was extracted. [35S]-methionine-labeled cell extract and either whole or fractionated conditioned medium was immunoprecipitated with polyclonal rabbit anti-rat apoB-100 (5 mg/mL; gift of Janet Sparks, University of Rochester, NY) bound to protein-G Sepharose, eluted, resolved with a 5% polyacrylamide gel containing SDS, enhanced by agitation in fluorographic reagent (Amplify; GE Healthcare, Piscataway NJ), and exposed to film. The gel, which also contained LDL and molecular weight markers, was stained with Coomassie blue and superimposed on the film, to permit band verification.
Yield of Particles Isolated from BrM/Choroid: Determination of Nanomoles per Eye
EC is localized almost exclusively to BrM (Rudolf M, et al. IOVS 2007;48:ARVO E-Abstract 2184). EC was therefore more suitable for yield calculations than either protein or other lipids such as UC that are present not only in BrM but are also abundant throughout the choroid. We determined EC content in BrM-LLP and BrM remainders of each donor eye pair using an enzymatic assay.13 Yield, calculated for each donor as (nmol/mL EC in BrM-LLP)/(nmol/mL EC in BrM-LLP + nmol/mL EC in BrM remainder), varied from 32% to 73% (median, 60%), with no obvious relation to age or maculopathy status. This value was used in calculating nanomoles per eye for each lipid class except SPM, which was independently assayed by TLC and quantified. SPM yield ranged from 49% to 66% (median, 53%), comparable to yields for EC and for lipoprotein particles similarly released from atherosclerotic intima.17
Determination of Nanomoles per Square Millimeter
Total yield-corrected BrM-LLP-derived lipid was expressed per square millimeter of BrM/choroid, so that we could compare our results directly with previous studies.16 We determined the area of flattened BrM/choroids using digital planimetry (IPLab; BioVision Technologies). This area was 843 ± 130 mm2 for individual eyes. Lipid quantities were converted to micrograms per square millimeters using the formula weight of a representative compound for each lipid class (e.g., cholesteryl oleate for EC, triolein for TG).
Additional Methods
Methods for Western blot analysis, enzymatic cholesterol assay, and negative stain electron microscopy were described previously.13
| Results |
|---|
|
|
|---|
74 years). EC mass exceeded that of TG by 4.6- to 13.9-fold among individual donors. Such compositional analyses of BrM/choroid unavoidably combine neutral lipids of BrM with membrane-associated UC and PL within choroidal cells and plasma lipoproteins retained in vessels. Therefore, we next isolated and characterized BrM-LLP in seven donors. The top fractions of BrM homogenates contained numerous spherical electron-lucent particles (Fig. 1C) ,13 whereas the bottom fractions contained amorphous, heterogeneous material not clearly identifiable as particles (not shown). Particle diameters varied from 11.3 to 211.6 nm in a single-mode, with a positively skewed distribution with a median of 66.6 nm (Fig. 1D) , similar to VLDL, and in good agreement with LLP diameters measured in situ.21 We previously showed that this fraction contains apoA-I and apoB.13 Here, we detected apoE, a ubiquitous druse component,9 11 22 by Western blot analysis in both fractions of BrM homogenates (Fig. 1E) , indicating that in addition to high-density forms, apoE may also be present on the large LLP. The BrM-LLP lipid profile, corrected for yield, is summarized in Table 2 (columns 1 to 10), and the plasma lipoprotein profile is shown in Supplementary Table S1, http://www.iovs.org/cgi/content/full/50/2/870/DC1. The BrM-LLP fraction contained 791.8 ± 376.8 nanomoles total lipid per eye, and each square millimeter of BrM contained 0.44 ± 0.16 nanomoles of LLP-derived lipids. Lipid classes, in order of descending abundance, were EC, UC, PC, PE, FA, PS, TG, CL, DAG, and LyPC. EC constituted 32.4% ± 7.9% of the total. EC mass, the most variable lipid, varied sevenfold among donors (Table 2) , without obvious explanation, but conforming to histochemical descriptions.7 BrM-LLP differed notably from plasma lipoproteins in several ways (Table 3) . The mean EC/TG ratio was 11.3 ± 6.7, compared to 0.11, 0.13, and 8.5 for CM, VLDL, and LDL, respectively. Thus, BrM-LLP were not TG-rich like CM or VLDL, and their EC/TG ratio was high, similar to LDL. BrM-LLP PL were also distinct, with the PC/PE ratio much lower than that for plasma lipoproteins (1.29 ± 0.19 vs. 6.0 to 14.9; Table 3 ). Because lipid profiling did not include SPM, which is more closely associated with UC than other PL in plasma membranes,23 we determined the SPM content independently (Table 2 , column 11). We found 79.5 ± 11.1 nmol/eye SPM, and the ratio of SPM to PC measured on the same TLC plates was 0.70 ± 0.13, much higher than the 0.28 to 0.37 ratio in plasma lipoproteins (Table 3) . Finally, CL and PS were detected in BrM-LLP but not in plasma lipoproteins (Table 2 versus Supplementary Table S1, http://www.iovs.org/cgi/content/full/50/2/870/DC1).
|
|
|
|
|
| Discussion |
|---|
|
|
|---|
BrM-LLP reside in a tissue bounded on one side by plasma in the choroid and on the other side by RPE, making determining the predominant source a challenge. For example, LDL could infiltrate from plasma into BrM, become modified, and fuse to form larger particles, as it does in intima,34 although such fusion is rarely observed in BrM.8 In the present study, we showed that an RPE cell line has an apparently functional mechanism for apoB biosynthesis, assembly, and secretion. We chose for these experiments the rat-derived cell line RPE-J, although cognizant that key facets of lipoprotein metabolism differ in rats and humans. In brief, rats carry plasma cholesterol principally in HDL rather than LDL, they lack the cholesterol ester transfer protein, and they synthesize apoB-48 in hepatocytes as well as enterocytes.35 36 Nevertheless, we were able to demonstrate that RPE-J extracts and medium contained a high-molecular-weight band readily immunoprecipitable by an antibody with documented specificity for rat apoB.37 We also detected a solitary lower molecular weight band at a location consistent with apoB-48 (unlike human RPE11 12 ). Easily proteolyzed apoB-100 is vulnerable to oxidative degradation in our iron-containing culture medium, but had this process occurred, we may have expected many low-weight bands instead of just one. As no in situ evidence for LLP in the extracellular matrix apical to RPE yet exists, basolateral secretion is the currently most plausible mechanism to account for BrM-LLP. We proceed under this assumption, but acknowledge that many details of an RPE apoB pathway require further elucidation and that a plasma contribution to BrM lipids is not excluded.
From our observations that EC is the dominant neutral lipid in nonhomogenized BrM/choroid and that RPE-J cells produce EC-rich large particles in culture, we infer that the high cholesterol content of BrM-LLP is not attributable to transfer or degradation of TG from originally TG-rich particles. The RPE appears unique among apoB secretors in producing a particle that is EC-rich by direct biosynthesis rather than by postsecretion metabolic remodeling, although we cannot yet exclude a role for secreted enzymes. What controls the EC/TG ratio in a lipoprotein core? The predictable apoB lipoprotein size and composition relationship, wherein circulating particles become EC-rich as they shrink from CM to remnants and from VLDL to LDL, reflects in part conformations imposed by particle surface curvature for lipases and transferases. Less clear is what governs EC/TG in nascent lipoproteins, typically studied in culture to escape these plasma effects. Overexpression in hepatoma cells of mRNA encoding cellular enzymes catalyzing esterification of either glycerol or cholesterol to fatty acyl Co-A (DGAT-1,-2 and ACAT-1,-2, respectively4 ) can modify neutral lipid composition, suggesting that adequate stores of either EC or TG can permit particle maturation.4 Indeed, overexpression of ACAT-2, expressed by lipoprotein-secreting hepatocytes and enterocytes, can convert cells from secreting strongly TG-rich particles to secreting strongly EC-rich particles.38 RPE cell lines, initially thought to express only the more widely distributed ACAT1,12 have been recently shown to express ACAT239 as well. The cell type–specific balance in activity between these two esterification mechanisms remains to be determined for RPE.
What is the ultimate source of lipids feeding into BrM-LLP? It has long been expected that the daily ingestion of photoreceptor OS by RPE results in the export of material to BrM.40 We postulated that a TG-rich apoB lipoprotein would be an excellent mechanism for releasing FA derived from PL in OS membranes. Current and previously published compositional data from BrM, LLP, and OS together provide little evidence for this initially attractive hypothesis. First, OS phagocytosis is not essential for neutral lipid secretion, based on experiments using FA supplementation of RPE cell lines.12 Second, BrM-LLP are not TG-rich, shown in our study by LC-GC and TLC and previously by two other techniques.6 13 Each method has strengths and limitations, but all data agree that the original report16 of high TG mass in BrM/choroid cannot be replicated. (Our assays of BrM/choroid recovered 5.6- to 7.8-fold more total lipid, depending on assumptions, than reported in Ref. 16 ) Third, BrM-LLP are highly enriched in both EC,7 absent from photoreceptors, and UC, sparse in the discs that constitute most OS membranes.41 Fourth, the FA composition of neither the neutral lipids of the BrM-LLP core nor the PL of its surface resemble OS, particularly regarding the top three components: DHA, stearate, and palmitate.42 We offer several explanations. First, OS lipids may be thoroughly catabolized by RPE before resynthesis as particle components. Second, DHA is efficiently recycled back to the retina,43 leaving little for export. Third, OS-derived lipids may be present in a form (e.g., oxidized44 ) not recognizable by our assays. Fourth, some lipid classes may be selectively and extensively hydrolyzed in the extracellular compartment after secretion (e.g., by choroid-resident45 or RPE-secreted lipases), now a less likely option based on our analysis of whole choroid and RPE-J conditioned medium. Fifth, another input may dominate BrM-LLP, which compositionally resemble LDL more than they do OS, despite low linoleate levels. LDL taken up at RPE LDL receptors46 47 can modify lysosomal acid lipase activity and can partition rapidly, within hours, into membranes of the neurosensory retina.48 In this way, retina is unlike brain, which eschews plasma lipoprotein cholesterol and relies almost exclusively on endogenous synthesis.49 Further, the ARPE-19 cell line can take up xanthophylls destined for macular pigment, normally transported in plasma on lipoproteins, via a basally expressed scavenger receptor.50 Rather than disposing of OS, then, perhaps BrM-LLP dispose of the residual components of plasma lipoproteins after extracting specific nutrients.
The EC-enrichment of BrM-LLP has implications for ARM pathogenesis with regard to transport properties and lesion formation. In vivo BrM-LLP preferentially accumulate in the middle and inner layers of BrM (closer to the RPE), occupying one eighth of the tissue volume at those sites in eyes aged >60 years.8 21 In the Lipid Wall, located closest to the RPE in the same horizontal plane as BlinD, tightly packed layers of BrM-LLP fill more than one third of tissue volume.7 The barrier hypothesis posits that this age-related accumulation of neutral lipids blocks translocation of nutrients to the RPE and photoreceptors as well as the outward flow of fluid and metabolites, thereby causing deleterious cellular stress.5 51 EC is the most hydrophobic lipid in mammalian physiology,52 indicating that aged BrM, particularly in eyes with a Lipid Wall,7 53 should indeed present a formidable barrier. Our data may facilitate the construction of and informed experimentation with in vitro model systems to study transport across natural and artificial matrices, perhaps using readily available LDL as an acceptable surrogate because of its high EC content.54 Further, survival of healthy RPE transplanted to aged BrM55 may be improved by EC-solubilizing treatments. With regard to lesion formation, cholesterol crystals, the hallmark of a mature atherosclerotic plaque, have never been described in BrM or drusen. A previous speculation56 that high TG levels16 could maintain EC solubility and forestall crystal development is rendered untenable by the current data. Of relevance is our detecting UC-avid SPM in higher concentrations (SPM/PC = 0.7) than reported for plasma lipoproteins (SPM/PC
0.3) but in lower concentrations than in insoluble plaque (SPM/PC = 1.6).57 That BrM-LLP contain abundant EC supports the interpretation that BlinD/ drusen contain ultrastructurally visible pooled EC, like that in atherosclerotic intima.56 58 59
Of particular interest is the finding that BrM-LLP contain RE, with high between-individual variability (in mol%) perhaps due to uncontrolled exposure to light postmortem. Vitamin A derivatives are required for normal phototransduction, and retinol is delivered to RPE for STRA6-mediated uptake by serum retinol binding protein (SRBP).60 A recent whole-body radiolabeled tracer study in wild-type mice and mice deficient in RPE65, an essential retinoid isomerohydrolase, provided evidence that RPE also exhibits a robust efflux of retinoids,29 without specifying the mechanism by which it occurs. Of apoB-producing organs, only intestine incorporates locally esterified retinol into a lipoprotein, and CM remnants deliver significant retinoid levels to nonhepatic tissues. The liver, in contrast, releases retinol stored in stellate cells to SRBP.61 Because the RPE expresses lecithin retinol acyl transferase, which catalyzes retinol esterification,62 it is a plausible source of BrM-LLP RE. It would be remarkable if nature borrowed a CM-like mechanism as a vehicle for retinoid removal in the eye.
| Acknowledgements |
|---|
| Footnotes |
|---|
Supported by National Institutes of Health (NIH) Grant EY06109 (CAC); the EyeSight Foundation of Alabama (CAC); the Macula Vision Research Foundation (CAC); Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (MR); NIH grant AA12153 (NYK); and Research to Prevent Blindness, Inc. (CAC).
Submitted for publication June 3, 2008; revised July 31 and August 29, 2008; accepted October 28, 2008.
Disclosure: L. Wang, None; C.-M. Li, None; M. Rudolf, None; O.V. Belyaeva, None; B.H. Chung, None; J.D. Messinger, None; N.Y. Kedishvili, None; C.A. Curcio, None
The publication costs of this article were defrayed in part by page charge payment. This article must therefore be marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C.
1734 solely to indicate this fact.
Corresponding author: Christine A. Curcio, Department of Ophthalmology, 700 South 18th Street, Room H020, Callahan Eye Foundation Hospital, University of Alabama School of Medicine, Birmingham, AL 35294-0009; curcio{at}uab.edu.
| References |
|---|
|
|
|---|
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
T. Baba, I. A. Bhutto, C. Merges, R. Grebe, D. Emmert, D. S. McLeod, D. Armstrong, and G. A. Lutty A Rat Model for Choroidal Neovascularization Using Subretinal Lipid Hydroperoxide Injection Am. J. Pathol., June 1, 2010; 176(6): 3085 - 3097. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
C. A. Curcio, M. Johnson, J.-D. Huang, and M. Rudolf Apolipoprotein B-containing lipoproteins in retinal aging and age-related macular degeneration J. Lipid Res., March 1, 2010; 51(3): 451 - 467. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
M. Rudolf and C. A. Curcio Esterified Cholesterol Is Highly Localized to Bruch's Membrane, as Revealed by Lipid Histochemistry in Wholemounts of Human Choroid J. Histochem. Cytochem., August 1, 2009; 57(8): 731 - 739. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| HOME | HELP | FEEDBACK | SUBSCRIPTIONS | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |