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Merck

Hepatocyte activity of the cholesterol sensor smoothened regulates cholesterol and bile acid homeostasis in mice.

iScience (2021-09-28)
George D Dalton, Seh-Hoon Oh, Linda Tang, Stephanie Zhang, Amanda L Brown, Venkateshwari Varadharajan, Camelia Baleanu-Gogonea, Valentin Gogonea, Preeti Pathak, J Mark Brown, Anna Mae Diehl
ABSTRAKT

Cellular cholesterol is regulated by at least two transcriptional mechanisms involving sterol-regulatory-element-binding proteins (SREBPs) and liver X receptors (LXRs). Although SREBP and LXR pathways are the predominant mechanisms that sense cholesterol in the endoplasmic reticulum and nucleus to alter sterol-regulated gene expression, evidence suggests cholesterol in plasma membrane can be sensed by proteins in the Hedgehog (Hh) pathway which regulate organ self-renewal and are a morphogenic driver during embryonic development. Cholesterol interacts with the G-protein-coupled receptor Smoothened (Smo), which impacts downstream Hh signaling. Although evidence suggests cholesterol influences Hh signaling, it is not known whether Smo-dependent sterol sensing impacts cholesterol homeostasis in vivo. We examined dietary-cholesterol-induced reorganization of whole-body sterol and bile acid (BA) homeostasis in adult mice with inducible hepatocyte-specific Smo deletion. These studies demonstrate Smo in hepatocytes plays a regulatory role in sensing and feedback regulation of cholesterol balance driven by excess dietary cholesterol.

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Rabbit IgG HRP Linked Whole Ab, Cytiva NA934-1ML
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RIPA Buffer
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Anti-Cyp7a1 Antibody, clone 15B9.1, clone 15B9.1, from mouse