Abstract

The Niemann-Pick C-1 (NPC-1) gene codes for an intracellular membrane glycoprotein that processes low density lipoprotein (LDL)-imported cholesterol. Its absence is characterized by pathologic accumulation of cholesterol in endosomes and lysosomes. Niemann-Pick C-1 is involved in steroidogenesis in the adrenal, ovary, testis, and placenta. We investigated adrenal morphology of the BALB/c NPC-1−/− mutant mouse. Adrenals of mutant and wild type mice were similar at three weeks, but were substantially smaller in NPC-1−/− mice at eight weeks. The major histological difference was reduction in the thickness of the zona fasciculata, due to decreased cell volume. Lipid accumulation, revealed by Oil Red-O staining, was restricted to the zona fasciculata in wild type mice, but was found throughout the cortex in NPC-1 mutants. The 5′-flanking region of the mouse NPC-1 gene was cloned and sequenced. Comparison of the proximal promoter region revealed a CpG island and two consensus sequences for the cAMP response element (CRE). The role of the PKA pathway in transactivation of the NPC-1 promoter was probed by transient transfection of a 2.2 kb fragment of the 5′-flanking region fused to the luciferase reporter into mouse adrenal Y-1 and Leydig tumor cells and into nonsteroidogenic monkey kidney CV-1 cells. This promoter fragment displayed significant constitutive transcription, which was enhanced 3–5 fold in steroidogenic cells by treatment with 1 mM cAMP. The cAMP response was muted in CV-1 cells. We conclude that the NPC-1 gene is regulated by cAMP. It plays a role in normal cholesterol homeostasis and is essential for normal adrenal development and function.

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