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Publication : Expression cloning of an oxysterol 7alpha-hydroxylase selective for 24-hydroxycholesterol.

First Author  Li-Hawkins J Year  2000
Journal  J Biol Chem Volume  275
Issue  22 Pages  16543-9
PubMed ID  10748047 Mgi Jnum  J:62589
Mgi Id  MGI:1859119 Doi  10.1074/jbc.M001810200
Citation  Li-Hawkins J, et al. (2000) Expression cloning of an oxysterol 7alpha-hydroxylase selective for 24-hydroxycholesterol. J Biol Chem 275(22):16543-9
abstractText  The synthesis of 7alpha-hydroxylated bile acids from oxysterols requires an oxysterol 7alpha-hydroxylase encoded by the Cyp7b1 locus. As expected, mice deficient in this enzyme have elevated plasma and tissue levels of 25- and 27-hydroxycholesterol; however, levels of another major oxysterol, 24-hydroxycholesterol, are not increased in these mice, suggesting the presence of another oxysterol 7alpha-hydroxylase. Here, we describe the cloning and characterization of murine and human cDNAs and genes that encode a second oxysterol 7alpha-hydroxylase. The genes contain 12 exons and are located on chromosome 6 in the human (CYP39A1 locus) and in a syntenic position on chromosome 17 in the mouse (Cyp39a1 locus). CYP39A1 is a microsomal cytochrome P450 enzyme that has preference for 24-hydroxycholesterol and is expressed in the liver. The levels of hepatic CYP39A1 mRNA do not change in response to dietary cholesterol, bile acids, or a bile acid-binding resin, unlike those encoding other sterol 7alpha-hydroxylases. Hepatic CYP39A1 expression is sexually dimorphic (female > male), which is opposite that of CYP7B1 (male > female). We conclude that oxysterol 7alpha-hydroxylases with different substrate specificities exist in mice and humans and that sexually dimorphic expression patterns of these enzymes in the mouse may underlie differences in bile acid metabolism between the sexes.
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