Statins are drugs widely used in humans to treat hypercholesterolemia. Statins act by inhibiting cholesterol synthesis resulting in the activation of the transcription factor sterol-responsive element-binding protein-2 that controls the expression of genes involved in cholesterol homeostasis. Statin therapy also decreases plasma triglyceride and non-esterified fatty acid levels, but the mechanism behind this effect remains more elusive. Liver fatty acid-binding protein (L-FABP) plays a role in the influx of long-chain fatty acids into hepatocytes. Here we show that L-FABP is a target for statins. In rat hepatocytes, simvastatin treatment induced L-FABP mRNA levels in a dose-dependent manner. Moreover, L-FABP promoter activity was induced by statin treatment. Progressive 5′-deletion analysis revealed that the peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor (PPAR)-responsive element located at position -67/-55 was responsible for the statin-mediated transactivation of the rat L-FABP promoter. Moreover, treatment with simvastatin and the PPARα agonist Wy14,649 resulted in a synergistic induction of L-FABP expression (mRNA and protein) in rat Fao hepatoma cells. This effect was also observed in vivo in wild-type mice but not in PPARα-null animals demonstrating the direct implication of PPARα in L-FABP regulation by statin treatment. Statin treatment resulted in a rise in PPARα mRNA levels both in vitro and in vivo and activated the mouse PPARα promoter in a reporter assay. Altogether, these data demonstrate that L-FABP expression is up-regulated by statins through a mechanism involving PPARα. Moreover, PPARα might be a statin target gene. These effects might contribute to the triglyceride/non-esterified fatty acid-lowering properties of statins.
CITATION STYLE
Landrier, J. F., Thomas, C., Grober, J., Duez, H., Percevault, F., Souidi, M., … Besnard, P. (2004). Statin induction of liver fatty acid-binding protein (L-FABP) gene expression is peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-α-dependent. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 279(44), 45512–45518. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M407461200
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