Abstract

The finding that expression of a cholesterol 7alpha-hydroxylase (CYP7A1) transgene in cultured rat hepatoma cells caused a coordinate increase in lipogenesis and secretion of apoB-containing lipoproteins led to the hypothesis that hepatic production of apoB-containing lipoproteins may be linked to the expression of CYP7A1 (Wang, S.-L., Du, E., Martin, T. D., and Davis, R. A. (1997) J. Biol. Chem. 272, 19351-19358). To examine this hypothesis in vivo, a transgene encoding CYP7A1 driven by the constitutive liver-specific enhancer of the human apoE gene was expressed in C56BL/6 mice. The expression of CYP7A1 mRNA (20-fold), protein ( approximately 10-fold), and enzyme activity (5-fold) was markedly increased in transgenic mice compared with non-transgenic littermates. The bile acid pool of CYP7A1 transgenic mice was doubled mainly due to increased hydrophobic dihydroxy bile acids. In CYP7A1 transgenic mice, livers contained approximately 3-fold more sterol response element-binding protein-2 mRNA. Hepatic expression of mRNAs encoding lipogenic enzymes (i.e. fatty-acid synthase, acetyl-CoA carboxylase, stearoyl-CoA desaturase, squalene synthase, farnesyl-pyrophosphate synthase, 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-CoA reductase, and low density lipoprotein receptor) as well as microsomal triglyceride transfer protein were elevated approximately 3-5-fold in transgenic mice. CYP7A1 transgenic mice also displayed a >2-fold increase in hepatic production and secretion of triglyceride-rich apoB-containing lipoproteins. Despite the increased hepatic secretion of apoB-containing lipoproteins in CYP7A1 mice, plasma levels of triglycerides and cholesterol were not significantly increased. These data suggest that the 5-fold increased expression of the low density lipoprotein receptor displayed by the livers of CYP7A1 transgenic mice was sufficient to compensate for the 2-fold increase production of apoB-containing lipoproteins. These findings emphasize the important homeostatic role that CYP7A1 plays in balancing the anabolic lipoprotein assembly/secretion pathway with the cholesterol catabolic bile acid synthetic pathway.

Highlights

  • The finding that expression of a cholesterol 7␣-hydroxylase (CYP7A1) transgene in cultured rat hepatoma cells caused a coordinate increase in lipogenesis and secretion of apoB-containing lipoproteins led to the hypothesis that hepatic production of apoB-containing lipoproteins may be linked to the expression of CYP7A1

  • Previous studies using cultured rat hepatoma cells showed that stable expression of CYP7A1 increases the cellular content of mature sterol response element-binding protein-1 (SREBP1) as well as mRNAs encoding essentially all the lipogenic enzymes required for very low density lipoprotein (VLDL) lipid production and assembly and secretion of apoB100-containing lipoproteins [19]

  • In the studies reported here, we examine the effect of expressing a CYP7A1 transgene in mice on the hepatic expression of mRNAs encoding SREBP1 and SREBP2, lipogenic enzymes, the low density lipoprotein (LDL) receptor, and microsomal triglyceride transfer protein (MTP) and relate these changes to the production of hepatic apoBcontaining lipoproteins

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Summary

Introduction

The finding that expression of a cholesterol 7␣-hydroxylase (CYP7A1) transgene in cultured rat hepatoma cells caused a coordinate increase in lipogenesis and secretion of apoB-containing lipoproteins led to the hypothesis that hepatic production of apoB-containing lipoproteins may be linked to the expression of CYP7A1 Previous studies using cultured rat hepatoma cells showed that stable expression of CYP7A1 increases the cellular content of mature sterol response element-binding protein-1 (SREBP1) as well as mRNAs encoding essentially all the lipogenic enzymes required for very low density lipoprotein (VLDL) lipid production and assembly and secretion of apoB100-containing lipoproteins [19]. These findings led us to hypothesize that CYP7A1 expression may indirectly regulate the assembly and secretion of VLDL via increasing the expression of SREBP, the expression of lipogenic enzymes and the expression of MTP [4, 11, 19, 20]. This paper is available on line at http://www.jbc.org ance between mature levels of SREBP1 compared with SREBP2 influences metabolism via changing the expression of their gene targets

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