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Publication : Cholesteryl ester transfer protein alters liver and plasma triglyceride metabolism through two liver networks in female mice.

First Author  Palmisano BT Year  2016
Journal  J Lipid Res Volume  57
Issue  8 Pages  1541-51
PubMed ID  27354419 Mgi Jnum  J:234327
Mgi Id  MGI:5789808 Doi  10.1194/jlr.M069013
Citation  Palmisano BT, et al. (2016) Cholesteryl ester transfer protein alters liver and plasma triglyceride metabolism through two liver networks in female mice. J Lipid Res 57(8):1541-51
abstractText  Elevated plasma TGs increase risk of cardiovascular disease in women. Estrogen treatment raises plasma TGs in women, but molecular mechanisms remain poorly understood. Here we explore the role of cholesteryl ester transfer protein (CETP) in the regulation of TG metabolism in female mice, which naturally lack CETP. In transgenic CETP females, acute estrogen treatment raised plasma TGs 50%, increased TG production, and increased expression of genes involved in VLDL synthesis, but not in nontransgenic littermate females. In CETP females, estrogen enhanced expression of small heterodimer partner (SHP), a nuclear receptor regulating VLDL production. Deletion of liver SHP prevented increases in TG production and expression of genes involved in VLDL synthesis in CETP mice with estrogen treatment. We also examined whether CETP expression had effects on TG metabolism independent of estrogen treatment. CETP increased liver beta-oxidation and reduced liver TG content by 60%. Liver estrogen receptor alpha (ERalpha) was required for CETP expression to enhance beta-oxidation and reduce liver TG content. Thus, CETP alters at least two networks governing TG metabolism, one involving SHP to increase VLDL-TG production in response to estrogen, and another involving ERalpha to enhance beta-oxidation and lower liver TG content. These findings demonstrate a novel role for CETP in estrogen-mediated increases in TG production and a broader role for CETP in TG metabolism.
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