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Vol. 289, Issue 1, 85-92, April 1999
Divisions of Cardiovascular Research (W.R.B., J.S.B., R.J.S., D.N.P., P.I.E., R.A.A., R.F.K.), Endocrine Research (R.A.G., L.S.B.), Drug Disposition (A.T.M., A.P.B.), and Research Technologies and Proteins (D.B.M), Eli Lilly and Company, Indianapolis, Indiana
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Abstract |
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The action of LY295427
[(3
,4
,5
)-4-(2-propenylcholestan-3-ol)], a compound that
derepresses low-density lipoprotein receptor (LDL-R) expression in a
cell-based model, was examined in hamsters. It was found that the
compound does not have an effect in normal chow-fed hamsters, in which
LDL-R levels are not repressed, but exerts a marked hypocholesterolemic
effect (>70% decrease) in cholesterol-coconut oil-fed hamsters, in
which LDL-R is repressed. In this model, there is a dose-response for
cholesterol lowering with an approximate ED50 value of 40 mg/kg/day and an inverse relationship between serum cholesterol and
serum LY295427 levels. LDL-R mRNA is increased (2-fold) and liver
cholesterol ester content is decreased (>90%). Unlike the
3-hydroxy-3-methylglutarylcoenzyme A reductase inhibitor lovastatin,
the decreased serum cholesterol is confined to the non-high-density
lipoprotein fraction. Furthermore, LY295427 does not affect cholesterol
biosynthesis, and it does not have a significant effect on cholesterol
absorption. These data suggest that LY295427 acts in the
hypercholesterolemic hamster by derepressing LDL-R transcription,
thereby enhancing cholesterol clearance from the blood. The results
with LY295427 suggest that compounds that act to increase LDL-R may
represent a novel approach in the pharmacotherapy for hypercholesterolemia.
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Introduction |
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Cardiovascular
disease represents the main cause of death in the United States, and
the relation between cardiovascular disease and the amount of serum
cholesterol and low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol has been well
established (Anderson et al., 1987
; Verschuren et al., 1995
).
Large-scale clinical trials have also shown that lowering serum LDL
cholesterol decreases cardiovascular mortality rates (Pedersen et al.,
1995
; Shepherd et al., 1995
).
The importance of the liver LDL receptor (LDL-R) in maintaining normal
LDL cholesterol levels has been well documented since the breakthrough
studies of Goldstein and Brown (Brown and Goldstein, 1986
; Goldstein
and Brown, 1974
). Although the types of agents used to lower
cholesterol in the clinical trials differ, they have generally been
shown to raise LDL-R in animal models (Ma et al., 1986
) and in humans
(Kervinen et al., 1993
) secondary to enzyme inhibition (Matsunaga et
al., 1994
) or increased bile acid excretion (Einarsson et al., 1991
).
Because the LDL-R is repressed and largely saturated in
hypercholesterolemia (Brown and Goldstein, 1986
), it would be
advantageous to develop a compound that derepressed the liver LDL-R as
its primary effect. Such a compound would be expected to affect LDL
cholesterol more directly than do currently available pharmacological interventions.
LDL-R transcription is repressed by a sterol regulatory element (SRE)
and mediated through sterol-activated transcription factors (Yokoyama
et al., 1993
). This system can be modulated in cell culture by
25-hydroxycholesterol (Brown and Goldstein, 1975
; Metherall et al.,
1989
). We expected that compounds that could overcome the
25-hyroxycholesterol-mediated repression of LDL-R expression in cell
systems would act to elevate LDL-R in hypercholesterolemia. Although
the SRE is also involved in the up-regulation of
3-hydroxy-3-methylglutarylcoenzyme A (HMG-CoA) reductase and HMG-CoA
synthetase (Molowa and Cimis, 1989
), these are modulated by other
negative regulatory pathways that would be expected to maintain
cholesterol synthesis at a normal rate (Straka and Panini, 1995
;
Hampton et al., 1996
).
Based on these considerations, a primary screen was established using
Chinese hamster ovary cells stably transfected with a gene construct in
which the DNA coding for the promoter and regulatory control elements
for the LDL-R gene was fused to a firefly luciferase reporter gene (Lin
et al., 1995
). Compounds were sought that increased LDL-R promoter
activity under repressed conditions in the presence of
25-hydroxycholesterol. Secondary assays were performed to eliminate
compounds that might have general promoter up-regulation activity.
We describe in this report the effects of LY295427
[(3
,4
,5
)-4-(2-propenylcholestan-3-ol)] (Fig.
1), discovered through this screen, on
LDL-R gene transcription and on cholesterol homeostasis in normal and
hypercholesterolemic hamsters, in which the effects of added
cholesterol and fat on the kinetics of hepatic LDL-R-mediated LDL
clearance are well characterized (Spady and Dietschy, 1988
; Horton et
al., 1993
).
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Materials and Methods |
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Animals.
All experiments were performed in accordance with
Eli Lilly and Company animal care and use policies. Male Syrian
hamsters (Charles River Laboratories) weighing 110 to 130 g were
housed in temperature- and humidity-regulated rooms with a 14-h
light/10-h dark cycle. Except where noted, they were maintained on a
high-fat diet consisting of Purina 5001 rodent chow (Purina Mills,
Richmond, IN), supplemented with 10% coconut oil and 0.12%
cholesterol for a minimum of 2 weeks before the start of experiments
(Woollett et al., 1992
). Animals were allowed free access to water and
diet with test compounds dry mixed into the diet on a weight basis.
Determination of Serum Lipids.
Hamsters were bled (400 µl)
from the suborbital sinus while under light CO2
anesthesia 1 to 2 h after the beginning of the light cycle, and
serum was separated by brief centrifugation (16,000g, 1 min,
Eppendorf model 5414). Total cholesterol and triglyceride levels were
determined in serum using enzymatic assay kits (290319 and 701094;
Boehringer-Mannheim, Indianapolis, IN) modified for use in 96-well
plates (10 µl of sample, 100 µl of cholesterol reagent, or 5 µl
of sample, 200 µl of triglyceride reagent, both with 30-min
incubation at room temperature). High-density lipoprotein (HDL)
cholesterol was determined similarly after removal of non-HDL cholesterol through magnesium phosphotungstate precipitation (543004; Boehringer-Mannheim) (Weingand and Daggy, 1990
). Serum from
hypercholesterolemic hamsters was diluted with an equal volume of 0.9%
NaCl before the removal of non-HDL cholesterol and before triglyceride
determination. LY295427 added to the cholesterol assay at
concentrations up to its solubility limit (equivalent to 150 mg/dl
serum) did not interfere.
Determination of Hepatic Lipids.
Livers obtained at the time
of sacrifice were frozen in liquid nitrogen and maintained at
75°C
until analysis. Neutral lipids were extracted from liver samples (1 g)
with chloroform/methanol (2:1, v/v) (Folch et al., 1957
). After
evaporation of the chloroform from the lipid extract under
N2, samples were resuspended (200 µl minimum)
in chloroform/methanol (4:1, v/v). A mixed standard consisting of
cholesterol, triolein, and cholesteryl oleate (0.5 mg each/ml) was
prepared and used to identify bands. High-performance thin-layer
chromatography Kieselgel 60 silica plates (EM Separations, Gibbstown,
NJ) were washed in the mobile phase of hexane/heptane/diethyl ether/acetic acid (63:18.5:18.5:18.5:1, v/v) (Schmitz et al., 1984
) and
activated for 15 min in a 110°C oven. Samples (3 µl) and standards
were applied in bands (6 mm) using a Linomat IV TLC Sample Applicator
(Camag Scientific, Wilmington, NC). The plates were developed twice (2 min, 10 min) in a saturated chamber with fresh mobile phase. The lipids
were quantified after fluorescence induction in hexane/ethanol/sulfuric
acid (64:35:1, v/v) (Kurantz et al., 1991
) using a Camag TLC Scanner II
(Camag Scientific, Wilmington, NC).
Measurement of Serum Concentration of LY295427.
Serum (1 ml)
was loaded onto a previously conditioned (15 ml water) 1-ml C18
Bond-Elut solid-phase extraction column (Analytichem, Harbor City, CA)
and eluted with hexane (3 × 1.5 ml). The eluant was dried and
reconstituted in ethanol (40 µl) for chromatography. Components were
separated from 3-µl samples on a Varian 3400 gas chromatograph
(Walnut Creek, CA) equipped with a J & W Scientific 8 m × 0.25 mm
DB-Wax capillary column (Folsom, CA.). The injector temperature was set
at 350°C. The initial column temperature was 200°C for 1 min and
then ramped at a linear rate of 50°C/min to 280°C. The final oven
temperature of 280°C was maintained for 4.5 min. Helium carrier gas
was set at 4 psi. The chromatograph was interfaced to a Nermag R 30-10
triple-quadrupole mass spectrometer (Delsi Instruments Inc., Houston
TX). Negative-ion methane chemical ionization was used to ionize and
detect the analyte. Parameters were optimized to yield the greatest
signal for the [M-H]
ion of LY295427
(m/z 427). Source pressure was optimal at 6 × 10
2 mm Hg. Ion source temperature was
200°C, electron energy was 95.5 eV, filament current was 0.240 mA,
and the multiplier was 0.66 kV. The 2-butylene derivative of LY295427
(m/z 441) was used as an internal standard. This method
could detect 50 ng of LY295427/ml serum with a signal-to-noise ratio of
5:1 and was linear to 2000 ng of LY295427/ml serum.
Cholesterol Absorption Studies.
Hypercholesterolemic
hamsters were presorted into groups of 12 animals with equal mean serum
cholesterol levels and were fed either the control hypercholesterolemic
diet or that diet containing various amounts (w/w) of
-sitosterol
(0.4%, 0.6%, 0.8%, or 1.0%) or 0.2% LY295427. After 2 weeks on the
test diets, the mean serum cholesterol level in the 1.0%
-sitosterol group was virtually identical to that of the 0.2%
LY295427 group. These doses correspond to approximately 100 mg of
LY295427/kg/day and 500 mg of
-sitosterol/kg/day. Cholesterol
absorption in 10 hamsters from each of these two groups and from 10 control hypercholesterolemic hamsters was determined as described by
Turley et al. (1994)
, where the ratio of 3H to
14C in serum was measured 72 h after the
administration of 14C-cholesterol (by oral
gavage) and 3H-cholesterol (by i.v. injection).
The 3H-cholesterol in Intralipid was injected
into the exposed jugular vein with the animal under ketamine HCl
(Ketaset; 80 mg/kg)/xylazine (Rompun; 16 mg/kg) anesthesia.
Measurement of LDL-R mRNA by S1-Nuclease Protection Assay.
Total RNA was isolated from liver samples (1 g) by a guanidinium
thiocyanate-phenol-chloroform single-step extraction (Chomczynki and
Sacchi, 1987
) (RNA Isolation Kit; Stratagene, La Jolla, CA) and
quantified by the orcinol method (Kabat and Mayer, 1961
). The probe
template contained a genomic DNA fragment
(HincII/HaeIII) of 210 bp inserted into the
SmaI site of the M13 mp19 vector. The DNA insert
corresponds to exon 2 (123 nucleotides) of the hamster LDL-R gene (gift
and personal communication, D. W. Russell, University of Texas). A
single-stranded 32P-labeled cDNA probe was
synthesized and hybridized to mRNA with minor modification of the
method described by Williams et al. (1986)
. Single-stranded template
DNA (4 µg) was annealed to a universal sequencing primer of 17 nucleotides (56 ng) and extended in the presence of 50 µM
[
-32P]dCTP (400 Ci/mmol); 0.25 mM
concentration each of dTTP, dATP, and dGTP; and the Klenow fragment of
Escherichia coli DNA polymerase I. The extended product was
digested with HindIII, and the resulting probe (~2.8 × 106 cpm/fmol) was purified by 7 M urea/5%
polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (Integrated Separation Systems,
Natick, MA) and crush-elution of the radioactive DNA band (300 bases)
(Maniatis et al., 1982
). The single-stranded 32P
probe (200 pg) was hybridized at 68°C for 60 h with various amounts of total cellular RNA (0, 6, 25, 100, and 200 µg) in
triplicate and digested with 100 units of S1 nuclease for 2 h at
45°C. The nuclease-resistant hybrids were collected by
trichloroacetic acid precipitation, and radioactivity was measured by
scintillation counting. A set of samples without RNA was used to
determine the S1 nuclease-resistant background of the probe. This
background value was subtracted from the experimental samples. Another
set of samples without RNA were assayed and not treated with S1
nuclease; these samples were used to confirm the amount of probe used
in the assay. The slopes of straight lines fitted to the LDL-R mRNA curve were taken to reflect the cpm of protected probe per microgram of
total RNA.
14C-Acetate Incorporation into Cellular Lipids.
HepG2 cells were grown to confluence on 100-mm2
plates using 7.5 ml of medium [Dulbecco's modified Eagle's
medium/Ham's F-12 nutrient mixture (3:1, v/v), 0.5% BSA]. LY295427,
lovastatin, and triparanol were added in 7.5 ml of fresh medium, and
cells were incubated for 24 h at 37°C.
14C-Acetate (15 nCi/7.5 µl) and 1 mM sodium
acetate (7.5 µl) were added, and the cells were incubated at 37°C
for 4 h. Cells were washed and harvested by scraping and
centrifugation (16,000g, 1 min). Pelleted cells were
resuspended in water (0.5 ml), aliquots (20 µl) of the suspension
were taken for protein determination (Bradford, 1976
), the remainder
was disrupted by sonication, and neutral lipids were extracted with
chloroform/methanol (2:1, v/v) (Folch et al., 1957
). Dried extracts
were further extracted and saponified (Boogaard et al., 1987
).
Resuspension volumes (200 µl minimum) of chloroform/methanol (4:1,
v/v) were normalized for protein in each sample. High performance
thin-layer chromatographic RP-18 plates were washed in the mobile phase
consisting of acetonitrile/chloroform (2:1, v/v) and activated for 15 min in a 110°C oven. A mixed standard composed of cholesterol,
desmosterol, lanosterol, squalene, farnesol, geraniol, and two
presqualene epioxides, 2,3-squalene epoxide and 2,3,22,23-squalene
diepoxide, was prepared. Sample and standards (5 µl) were applied in
6-mm bands, and plates were developed in the fresh mobile phase (20 min). The plates were stained with 5% phosphomolybdic acid in ethanol
to visualize standards, and 14C-acetate
incorporation into cholesterol and its precursors was detected with
autoradiography (Kodak X-OMAT-AR film for 5 days at
70°C).
Reagents.
Lovastatin was from Merck, Sharp & Dohme Research
Laboratories (Rahway, NJ). Triparanol was from Marion Merrill Dow Inc.
(Kansas City, MO).
-Sitosterol was from Eli Lilly & Co.
(Indianapolis, IN). Ketaset and Rompun were from Baker Veterinarian
Supplies (Indianapolis, IN). MCT Oil (medium-chain triglycerides) was
from Mead Johnson (Evansville, IN). Intralipid (20%) was from Kabi Pharmacia (Clayton, NC). Na+
[2-14C]acetate,
[4-14C]cholesterol,
[1,2-3H]cholesterol, and
[
-32P]dCTP (400 Ci/mmol) were from DuPont
NEN (Boston, MA). M13 sequencing primer (
20) 17-mer was from New
England Biolabs (Beverly, MA). The Klenow fragment of E. coli DNA polymerase I, HindIII restriction endonuclease, and unlabeled deoxynucleotides were from Promega (Madison, WI). LY295427
[(3
,4
,5
)-4-(2-propenyl)cholestan-3-ol)] (Fig. 1),
(3
,4
,5
)-4-(2-butenyl)cholestan-3-ol (mass spectroscopy standard) (Lin et al., 1995
), 2,3-squalene epoxide, and
2,3,22,23-squalene diepoxide (Dr. John Schauss) were synthesized at
Lilly Research Laboratories. All other reagents were of the highest
grade available commercially.
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Results |
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In normocholesterolemic hamsters, 2-week administration of the
HMG-CoA reductase inhibitor lovastatin (50 mg/kg/day) lowered the serum
cholesterol by 70% (Fig. 2A). In
contrast, LY295427 had no effect on serum cholesterol at either 50 or
500 mg/kg/day (Fig. 2B). The distinct difference in the effects of the
two compounds was also seen in HDL cholesterol; lovastatin decreased
HDL cholesterol levels by 71%, whereas LY295427 was without effect.
Thus, in contrast to lovastatin, LY295427 did not alter either total
serum cholesterol or HDL cholesterol in chow-fed, normocholesterolemic
hamsters.
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To examine the effect of LY295427 under conditions of hyperlipemia,
hamsters were fed a diet enriched with 10% coconut oil and 0.12%
cholesterol for 2 weeks before the administration of LY295427. As
anticipated, the serum cholesterol levels produced by the
coconut-cholesterol feeding were about 2.5-fold higher than unenriched
diet values (Fig. 3). LY295427 produced
dose-dependent decreases in serum cholesterol in hypercholesterolemic
animals (Fig. 3). The effect was time dependent, reaching a plateau
between 14 and 21 days at the two highest doses. Serum cholesterol in the animals given 25, 50, and 100 mg LY295427/kg/day was decreased by
38%, 56%, and 69%, respectively, compared with controls after 29 days. From these data, the ED50 value for
LY295427 was estimated to be 40 mg/kg. At the highest dose tested,
serum cholesterol was normalized to values observed in
normocholesterolemic hamsters (approximately 150 mg/dl). Thus, unlike
the results in normocholesterolemic animals, LY295427 markedly reduced
serum cholesterol in hypercholesterolemic hamsters.
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The relationship between serum levels of LY295427 and serum cholesterol
was examined in hypercholesterolemic animals dosed for 2 weeks. As the
dose of LY295427 increased, the serum levels of the compound increased
similarly (Fig. 4A), showing that the compound is well absorbed. Furthermore, serum cholesterol levels were
highly correlated with serum levels of LY295427 (Fig. 4B). These data
suggest that the hypocholesterolemic effect of LY295427 is primarily
mediated by drug that is bioavailable as a result of absorption from
the gastrointestinal tract.
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The effects of LY295427 and the HMG-CoA reductase inhibitor lovastatin
on serum lipids were compared in hypercholesterolemic hamsters, and the
results are presented in Fig. 5. In these
animals, the serum cholesterol lowering by lovastatin resulted from
reductions in cholesterol in both the HDL (Fig. 5C) and non-HDL (Fig.
5B) lipoprotein fractions. The effect of lovastatin on serum
triglyceride levels was variable and did not appear to be dose
dependent (Fig. 5D). Although a dramatic reduction of serum
triglyceride was observed at the highest dose of lovastatin (45 mg/kg/day), this may have been due in part to secondary effects of
lovastatin as demonstrated by a significant decrease in body weight
gain relative to the control group (data not shown).
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Although less potent than lovastatin, LY295427 also decreased serum cholesterol in a dose-dependent manner (Fig. 5E). However, in contrast to lovastatin, the effect of LY295427 was confined to the non-HDL fraction (Fig. 5G). Although there was a modest tendency for LY295424 to increase HDL cholesterol levels, no significant change in HDL cholesterol was seen (Fig. 5F). Also in contrast to lovastatin, there was a dose-dependent decrease in serum triglyceride with LY295427 (Fig. 5H). Furthermore, there was no significant effect on body weight even at the highest dose of LY295427 (data not shown).
The effect of LY295427 and lovastatin on LDL-R mRNA levels was examined
in livers from hypercholesterolemic hamsters (Fig. 6). LDL-R mRNA was measured using the S1
nuclease protection assay at doses of lovastatin (5 mg/kg/day) and
LY29547 (120 mg/kg/day) that produced comparable reductions in serum
cholesterol (64% and 57% reductions, respectively). Both LY295427 and
lovastatin significantly increased LDL-R mRNA levels by 60% to 100%
relative to control. Furthermore, there was no significant difference
in mRNA levels between the two treatments. Thus, there was a comparable increase in LDL-R mRNA levels for a similar decrease in serum cholesterol with both compounds.
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The effects of LY295427 on cholesterol content in livers from
drug-treated hypercholesterolemic hamsters were also examined. LY295427
dose dependently lowered total hepatic cholesterol (Fig. 7). This effect was largely confined to
cholesterol ester, with little change in the free cholesterol levels.
The reduction of liver cholesterol by LY295427 was extensive, with the
concentration of hepatic cholesterol ester falling to 6% of the
control value at the highest dose used in this experiment, essentially
normalizing hepatic cholesterol to chow-fed levels.
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To determine whether effects on cholesterol absorption might contribute
to the reduction in serum cholesterol produced by LY295427, cholesterol
absorption was compared with the absorption inhibitor,
-sitosterol,
at equivalent cholesterol-lowering doses. To establish equivalent
doses, groups of hypercholesterolemic hamsters were treated with the
dietary administration of 0.2% LY295427 or of different concentrations
of
-sitosterol (0.4%, 0.6%, 0.8%, or 1.0%) for 2 weeks. The
group treated with 1.0%
-sitosterol had serum cholesterol levels
virtually identical to those of the group treated with 0.2% LY295427
(170.0 ± 5.6 versus 171.1 ± 4.4 mg/dl). Cholesterol
absorption was subsequently determined in 10 animals from each of these
two groups and in 10 control hypercholesterolemic animals (serum
cholesterol, 258.4 ± 14.3 mg/dl) (Fig.
8). The animals in the two treated groups showed a decrease of 32% and 34% in serum cholesterol relative to
control for the
-sitosterol and LY295427 groups, respectively. Treatment with
-sitosterol significantly lowered cholesterol absorption (
26%), whereas only a nonsignificant trend to effect was
observed with LY295427. This finding demonstrates that the hypocholesterolemic effect of LY295427 cannot be due solely to an
effect on cholesterol absorption. Although in a previous experiment, a
nonsignificant tendency for increased HDL occurred (Fig. 5G), in this
experiment, LY295427 significantly increased HDL by 23%, whereas
-sitosterol had no effect on HDL (Fig. 8B).
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Because some of these results could be a consequence of the inhibition
of cholesterol synthesis, we compared the effects of LY295427 on the
incorporation of 14C-labeled acetate into
cholesterol in HepG2 cells with those of lovastatin and triparanol, an
inhibitor of desmosterol-24-reductase. As anticipated, after 24 h
of treatment with lovastatin, there was a clear reduction in the
incorporation of label into cholesterol (Fig.
9). A similar reduction was seen with
triparanol, accompanied by the appearance of labeled intermediates at
the position of desmosterol and close to the position of squalene. In
contrast, even at 100 µM (the limit of solubility in this system),
LY295427 had no effect on acetate incorporation into cholesterol.
Furthermore, there was no evidence of the formation of pools of
intermediates.
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Discussion |
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The major finding in this study was that LY295427, shown
previously to reverse 25-hydroxycholesterol-mediated repression of LDL-R in vitro (Lin et al., 1995
), is an effective cholesterol-lowering agent in hamsters. This effect was highly dependent on conditions predisposing to hypercholesterolemia (e.g., dietary fat
administration). When LY295427 was administered to hamsters receiving
normal laboratory chow diet, there was no discernible effect on serum
lipids, which is in sharp contrast to the hypocholesterolemic action of
lovastatin under these conditions. These data reinforce the mechanistic
distinction between LY295427 and lovastatin, the latter of which
inhibits cholesterol biosynthesis as the underlying mechanism for
increasing LDL-R (Ma et al., 1986
; Cosgrove et al., 1993
). Thus, lack
of efficacy of LY295427 in chow-fed hamsters is consistent with the finding that LY295427 acts to reverse the repression of LDL-R and would
not be expected to be active when LDL-R is not repressed.
When hamsters are fed a diet enriched in both cholesterol and coconut
oil, the LDL-R and LDL fractional catabolic rate are both decreased
(Spady and Dietschy, 1988
; Spady et al., 1993
). Using a diet similar to
ours, Horton et al. (1993)
demonstrated a decrease in LDL-R mRNA to
38% of chow-fed control values. When we examined LY295427 in
cholesterol-coconut oil-fed hamsters, there was a significant,
dose-dependent lowering of serum cholesterol by LY295427, which is in
sharp contrast to the results in chow-fed hamsters. This decrease was
confined to the non-HDL lipoproteins, as would be expected for a
compound increasing the number of LDL-R, thus increasing the fractional
catabolic rate of LDL (Spady and Dietschy, 1988
; Himber et al., 1995
).
In addition, LY295427 was found in the serum and the serum LY295427
inversely correlated with the serum cholesterol levels, strongly
suggesting that LY295427 acts metabolically rather than by interfering
with the absorption of fat or cholesterol from the diet (see below).
Furthermore, the lowered serum cholesterol was accompanied by an
increase in liver LDL-R mRNA of the same magnitude as that induced by
lovastatin for the same reduction of serum cholesterol. Although LDL-R
was not directly measured in these experiments, LDL-R mRNA has been shown to correlate with LDL-R in a variety of dietary manipulations (Horton et al., 1993
).
The decreased serum cholesterol observed with LY295427 in the cholesterol-coconut oil-fed hamsters could not be attributed to accumulation in the liver because the increased hepatic cholesterol ester detected with cholesterol-coconut oil feeding was completely reversed with LY295427. This suggests either that LY295427 is interfering with intestinal absorption of the added cholesterol/fat or that it is increasing cholesterol elimination from the animal. In support of the latter possibility, we observed in preliminary studies an increase in the concentration of bile acids in bile from hypercholesterolemic hamsters treated with LY295427 (data not shown).
Concerning possible effects of LY295427 on cholesterol absorption, we
used the dual-isotope method (Turley et al., 1994
) to quantify this
parameter in drug-treated, hypercholesterolemic hamsters. Because
LY295427 has a structure related to that of cholesterol and certain
compounds structurally similar to cholesterol are known to be poorly
absorbed and to interfere with cholesterol absorption (Wilson and
Rudel, 1994
; Jones et al., 1997
), it was indeed possible that LY295427
might interfere with the absorption of cholesterol from the intestinal
lumen. Cholesterol absorption was examined in two groups of
hypercholesterolemic hamsters in which serum cholesterol had been
reduced to the same extent by LY295427 or by
-sitosterol. We found
that under these conditions, there was a significant decrease in the
percentage of dietary cholesterol absorbed when
-sitosterol was
present but no significant decrease with LY295427. Furthermore, there
was an increase in HDL cholesterol with LY295427 in this experiment,
but no change was observed with
-sitosterol. The difference in
Results between
-sitosterol and LY295427 suggests that
they are acting via different mechanisms and that changes in
cholesterol absorption cannot account for the effects of LY295427.
Nevertheless, we cannot rule out a possible contribution of cholesterol
absorption inhibition to the overall effects of LY295427.
It is possible that LY295427 could also have a direct effect on
cholesterol biosynthesis and thus indirectly affect LDL-R (Ma et al.,
1986
). Although LY295427 did not directly inhibit HMG-CoA reductase
(data not shown), it might inhibit other enzymes in the biosynthetic
pathway. When this was explored by comparing the effect of LY295427 on
the incorporation of labeled acetate into cholesterol in HepG2 cells,
there was no evidence of decreased cholesterol production or of
accumulation of synthetic intermediates as there was with the enzyme
inhibitors lovastatin and triparanol. Consequently, LY295427 does not
appear to act by interfering with cholesterol biosynthesis.
Sterols have been shown to regulate the expression of genes containing
SRE by protecting the membrane-bound transcription factors, SRE-binding
proteins (SREBP-1 and SREBP-2), from proteolysis through the action of
the SREBP activation protein (Brown and Goldstein, 1997
). In
sterol-depleted situations, the 125-kDa SREBP precursor bound to
endoplasmic reticulum or nuclear membrane is cleaved in two proteolytic
steps into a soluble 68-kDa fragment that moves into the nucleus, where
it stimulates transcription of SRE-containing genes, including HMG-CoA
reductase, HMG-CoA synthase, and the LDL-R. Sheng et al. (1995)
have
shown that in livers of hamsters fed cholesterol-rich diets, the amount
of SREBP-1c found in the nucleus decreased without any changes in the
amount of its membrane-bound precursor or of its mRNA. This was
accompanied by a moderate decrease in the amount of LDL-R mRNA and
larger reductions in the amount of mRNA for HMG-CoA reductase and for HMG-CoA synthase. Cell mutants with defects in the proteolytic processing of SREBP precursor are auxotropic for cholesterol, failing
to synthesize cholesterol and express LDL-R (Sakai et al., 1996
). It is
possible that LY295427 may act by interfering with the sterol
protection of SREBP proteolysis because it was originally identified by
the derepression of a 25-hydroxycholesterol repressed expression
system. Bowling et al. (1996)
have shown that LY295427 can enhance the
binding of 25-hyroxycholesterol to a number of cytosolic proteins,
although not to the classic oxysterol binding protein. Conceivably, the
LY295427-enhanced binding of 25-hydroxycholesterol, or other
oxysterols, to proteins not involved in sterol synthesis or regulation
could deplete the pool of oxysterol sufficiently to allow increased
proteolytic processing and release of active SREBP, followed by
increased transcription of LDL-R gene, leading to increased synthesis
of LDL-R. Further experiments are required to demonstrate this possibility.
In summary, LY295427 was shown to be an effective cholesterol-lowering agent in hypercholesterolemic hamsters. This effect was accompanied by an increase in liver LDL-R and could not be accounted for by inhibition of the cholesterol biosynthetic pathway or by interference with intestinal cholesterol absorption. These results are in good agreement with previous studies in which LY295427 derepressed LDL-R in cells treated with 25-hydroxycholesterol. Although delineation of the precise in vivo mechanism awaits further investigation, the results of these studies support the hypothesis that cholesterol lowering by LY295427 is mediated by depression of LDL-R.
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Acknowledgments |
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We sincerely thank Dr. Marlene Cohen for many helpful discussions during preparation of the manuscript.
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Footnotes |
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Accepted for publication October 28, 1998.
Received for publication June 1, 1998.
1 A preliminary report of these results was presented at the Experimental Biology 1994 meeting (FASEB J 8:A373).
Send reprint requests to: Dr. William R. Bensch, Cardiovascular Research, Drop Code 0522, Lilly Research Laboratories, Lilly Corporate Center, Indianapolis, IN 46285. E-mail: wrbensch{at}lilly.com
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Abbreviations |
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HDL, high-density lipoprotein; HMG-CoA, 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutarylcoenzyme A; LDL, low-density lipoprotein; LDL-R, low-density lipoprotein receptor; SRE, sterol regulatory element; SREBP, sterol regulatory element binding protein.
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References |
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