Abstract

Receptor-mediated cholesterol uptake has been suggested to play a role in maintaining the adrenal intracellular free cholesterol pool and the ability to produce hormones. Therefore, in the current study, we evaluated the importance of scavenger receptor class B type I (SR-BI)-mediated cholesteryl ester uptake from HDL for adrenal glucocorticoid hormone synthesis in vivo. No difference was observed in the plasma level of corticosterone between SR-BI-deficient and wild-type mice under ad libitum feeding conditions. Overnight fasting ( approximately 16 h) stimulated the plasma level of corticosterone by 2-fold in wild-type mice. In contrast, no effect of fasting on plasma corticosterone levels was observed in SR-BI-deficient mice, leading to a 44% lower plasma corticosterone level compared with their wild-type littermate controls. In parallel, an almost complete depletion of lipid stores in the adrenal cortex of fasted SR-BI-deficient mice was observed. Plasma adrenocorticotropic hormone levels were increased by 5-fold in fasted SR-BI-deficient mice. SR-BI deficiency induced marked changes in the hepatic expression of the glucocorticoid-responsive genes cholesterol 7alpha-hydroxylase, HMG-CoA synthase, apolipoprotein A-IV, corticosteroid binding globulin, interleukin-6, and tumor necrosis factor-alpha, which coincided with a 42% decreased plasma glucose level under fasting conditions. In conclusion, we show that the absence of adrenal HDL cholesteryl ester uptake in SR-BI-deficient mice impairs the adrenal glucocorticoid-mediated stress response to fasting as a result of adrenal glucocorticoid insufficiency and attenuated liver glucocorticoid receptor signaling, leading to hypoglycemia under fasting conditions.

Highlights

  • Receptor-mediated cholesterol uptake has been suggested to play a role in maintaining the adrenal intracellular free cholesterol pool and the ability to produce hormones

  • Previous studies by Rigotti, Miettinen, and Krieger [17] have shown that mice that do not contain a functional scavenger receptor class B type I (SR-BI) protein (SR-BI-deficient mice) show no gross phenotypic indications of adrenal insufficiency under standard feeding conditions, suggesting that cholesteryl ester uptake by SR-BI does not play an essential role in basal (“nonstressed”) adrenal hormone synthesis

  • We explored the possibility that SR-BI does play an essential role in physiological stress-induced adrenal glucocorticoid production, as SRBI-deficient mice fail to induce plasma glucocorticoid levels upon overnight (?16 h) fasting, leading to a 43% decreased plasma corticosterone level in these mice compared with wild-type mice

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Summary

Introduction

Receptor-mediated cholesterol uptake has been suggested to play a role in maintaining the adrenal intracellular free cholesterol pool and the ability to produce hormones. In the current study, we evaluated the importance of scavenger receptor class B type I (SR-BI)mediated cholesteryl ester uptake from HDL for adrenal glucocorticoid hormone synthesis in vivo. No difference was observed in the plasma level of corticosterone between SRBI-deficient and wild-type mice under ad libitum feeding conditions. Overnight fasting (?16 h) stimulated the plasma level of corticosterone by 2-fold in wild-type mice. We show that the absence of adrenal HDL cholesteryl ester uptake in SR-BI-deficient mice impairs the adrenal glucocorticoid-mediated stress response to fasting as a result of adrenal glucocorticoid insufficiency and attenuated liver glucocorticoid receptor signaling, leading to hypoglycemia under fasting conditions.—Hoekstra, M., I. Absence of HDL cholesteryl ester uptake in mice via SR-BI impairs an adequate adrenal glucocorticoid-mediated stress response to fasting.

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