Direct Interaction of Nuclear Liver X Receptor-β with ABCA1 Modulates Cholesterol Efflux

2008 
Cholesterol is an essential component of eukaryotic cells; at the same time, however, hyperaccumulation of cholesterol is harmful. Therefore, the ABCA1 gene, the product of which mediates secretion of cholesterol, is highly regulated at both the transcriptional and post-transcriptional levels. The transcription of ABCA1 is regulated by intracellular oxysterol concentration via the nuclear liver X receptor (LXR)/retinoid X receptor (RXR); once synthesized, ABCA1 protein turns over rapidly with a half-life of 1–2 h. Here, we show that the LXRβ/RXR complex binds directly to ABCA1 on the plasma membrane of macrophages and modulates cholesterol secretion. When cholesterol does not accumulate, ABCA1-LXRβ/RXR localizes on the plasma membrane, but is inert. When cholesterol accumulates, oxysterols bind to LXRβ, and the LXRβ/RXR complex dissociates from ABCA1, restoring ABCA1 activity and allowing apoA-I-dependent cholesterol secretion. LXRβ can exert an immediate post-translational response, as well as a rather slow transcriptional response, to changes in cellular cholesterol accumulation. Thus, we provide the first demonstration that protein-protein interaction suppresses ABCA1 function. Furthermore, we show that LXRβ is involved in both the transcriptional and post-transcriptional regulation of the ABCA1 transporter.
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