Cholesteryl ester transfer protein modulates the effect of liver X receptor agonists on cholesterol transport and excretion in the mouse

Abstract

International audienceHuman plasma, unlike mouse plasma, contains the cholesteryl ester transfer protein (CETP) that may influence the reverse cholesterol transport. Liver X receptor (LXR), an oxysterol-activated nuclear receptor induces CETP transcription via a direct repeat 4 element in the CETP gene promoter. The aim of the study was to assess in vivo the impact of LXR activation on CETP expression and its consequences on plasma lipid metabolism and hepatic and bile lipid content. Wild-type and humanized mice expressing CETP were treated for five days with T0901317 LXR agonist. This treatment produced marked rises in both hepatic CETP mRNA and plasma CETP activity levels. Interestingly, the LXR agonist-mediated, 2-fold rise in both total and HDL cholesterol levels in treated wild-type mice was not observed in CETPTg mice, and the accumulation of cholesterol in the liver of CETPTg mice was reversed by LXR agonist treatment. Moreover, LXR activation induced a 2-fold increase in hepatic LDL-receptor expression in wild-type and CETPTg mice, and it produced a significantly greater rise in biliary cholesterol concentration in CETPTg mice as compared with wild-type mice. In conclusion, induction of CETP constitutes a major determinant of the effect of LXR agonists on cholesterol transport and excretion

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    Last time updated on 06/10/2023