Taurine is a liver X receptor-α ligand and activates transcription of key genes in the reverse cholesterol transport without inducing hepatic lipogenesis.
2012
cope
Taurine, which is abundant in seafood, has antiatherogenic activities in both animals and humans; however, its molecular target has been elusive. We examined whether taurine could activate liver X receptor-α (LXR-α), a critical transcription factor in the regulation of reverse cholesterol transport in macrophages.
Methods and results
Taurine bound directly to LXR-α in a reporter gene assay, time-resolved fluorescence resonance energy transfer analysis, and limited protease digestion experiment. Macrophage cells incubated with taurine showed reduced cellular cholesterol and induced medium cholesterol in a dose-dependent manner with the induction of ATP-binding cassette transporter A1 and G gene and protein expression. In hepatocytes, taurine significantly induced Insig-2a levels and delayed nuclear translocation of the sterol regulatory element-binding protein 1 (SREBP-1) protein, resulting in a dose-dependent reduction in the cellular lipid levels without inducing the expression of fatty acid synthesis genes.
Conclusion
Taurine is a direct LXR-α ligand, represses cholesterol accumulation, and modulates the expression of genes involved in reverse cholesterol transport in macrophages, without inducing hepatic lipogenesis. The induction of Insig-2a suppressed the nuclear translocation of SREBP-1c.
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