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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 

Effects of hepatic expression of the high-density lipoprotein receptor SR-BI on lipoprotein metabolism and female fertility.

The etiology of human female infertility is often uncertain. The sterility of high-density lipoprotein (HDL) receptor-negative ( SR-BI(-/-)) female mice suggests a link between female infertility and abnormal lipoprotein metabolism. SR-BI(-/-) mice exhibit elevated plasma total cholesterol [with normal-sized and abnormally large HDL and high unesterified to total plasma cholesterol (UC:TC) ratio]. We explored the influence of hepatic SR-BI on female fertility by inducing hepatic SR-BI expression in SR-BI(-/-) animals by adenovirus transduction or stable transgenesis. For transgenes, we used both wild-type SR-BI and a double-point mutant, Q402R/Q418R (SR-BI-RR), which is unable to bind to and mediate lipid transfer from wild-type HDL normally, but retains virtually normal lipid transport activities with low-density lipoprotein. Essentially wild-type levels of hepatic SR-BI expression in SR-BI(-/-) mice restored to nearly normal the HDL size distribution and plasma UC:TC ratio, whereas approximately 7- to 40-fold overexpression dramatically lowered plasma TC and increased biliary cholesterol secretion. In contrast, SR-BI-RR overexpression had little effect on SR-BI(+/+) mice, but in SR-BI(-/-) mice, it substantially reduced levels of abnormally large HDL and normalized the UC:TC ratio. In all cases, hepatic transgenic expression restored female fertility. Overexpression in SR-BI(-/-) mice of lecithin:cholesterol acyl transferase, which esterifies plasma HDL cholesterol, did not normalize the UC:TC ratio, probably because the abnormal HDL was a poor substrate, and did not restore fertility. Thus, hepatic SR-BI-mediated lipoprotein metabolism influences murine female fertility, raising the possibility that dyslipidemia might contribute to human female infertility and that targeting lipoprotein metabolism might complement current assisted reproductive technologies.[1]

References

  1. Effects of hepatic expression of the high-density lipoprotein receptor SR-BI on lipoprotein metabolism and female fertility. Yesilaltay, A., Morales, M.G., Amigo, L., Zanlungo, S., Rigotti, A., Karackattu, S.L., Donahee, M.H., Kozarsky, K.F., Krieger, M. Endocrinology (2006) [Pubmed]
 
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