4.6 Article

Macrophage Fatty-acid Synthase Deficiency Decreases Diet-induced Atherosclerosis

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 285, Issue 30, Pages 23396-23407

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M110.100321

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [DK076729, HL083762, DK56341, DK20579, F32 DK083895, RR00954]
  2. American Diabetes Association and American Heart Association

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Fatty acid metabolism is perturbed in atherosclerotic lesions, but whether it affects lesion formation is unknown. To determine whether fatty acid synthesis affects atherosclerosis, we inactivated fatty-acid synthase (FAS) in macrophages of apoE-deficient mice. Serum lipids, body weight, and glucose metabolism were the same in FAS knock-out in macrophages (FASKOM) and control mice, but blood pressure was lower in FASKOM animals. Atherosclerotic extent was decreased 20-40% in different aortic regions of FASKOM as compared with control mice on Western diets. Foam cell formation was diminished in FASKOM as compared with wild type macrophages due to increased apoAI-specific cholesterol efflux and decreased uptake of oxidized low density lipoprotein. Expression of the anti-atherogenic nuclear receptor liver X receptor alpha (LXR alpha; Nr1h3) and its downstream targets, including Abca1, were increased in FASKOM macrophages, whereas expression of the potentially pro-atherogenic type B scavenger receptor CD36 was decreased. Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor alpha (PPAR alpha) target gene expression was decreased in FASKOM macrophages. PPAR alpha agonist treatment of FASKOM and wild type macrophages normalized PPAR alpha target gene expression as well as Nr1h3 (LXR alpha). Atherosclerotic lesions were more extensive when apoE null mice were transplanted with LXR alpha-deficient/FAS-deficient bone marrow as compared with LXR alpha-replete/FAS-deficient marrow, consistent with anti-atherogenic effects of LXR alpha in the context of FAS deficiency. These results show that macrophage FAS deficiency decreases atherosclerosis through induction of LXR alpha and suggest that FAS, which is induced by LXR alpha, may generate regulatory lipids that cause feedback inhibition of LXR alpha in macrophages.

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