4.7 Article

Amiodarone disrupts cholesterol biosynthesis pathway and causes accumulation of circulating desmosterol by inhibiting 24-dehydrocholesterol reductase

Journal

JOURNAL OF INTERNAL MEDICINE
Volume 288, Issue 5, Pages 560-569

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/joim.13095

Keywords

amiodarone; desmosterol; DHCR24; cholesterol biosynthesis; cholesterol absorption

Funding

  1. State Research Funding (VTR) for Helsinki University Hospital [TYH2018129, Y2018SK020, Y2019SK020]
  2. Aarne Koskelo Foundation
  3. University of Helsinki
  4. Academy of Finland [282192, 312491, 307415]
  5. Sigrid Juselius Foundation
  6. Australian Research Council [DP170101178]
  7. NSW Health Investigator Development Grant
  8. Academy of Finland (AKA) [312491] Funding Source: Academy of Finland (AKA)

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Background We have earlier reported that amiodarone, a potent and commonly used antiarrhythmic drug increases serum desmosterol, the last precursor of cholesterol, in 20 cardiac patients by an unknown mechanism. Objective Here, we extended our study to a large number of cardiac patients of heterogeneous diagnoses, evaluated the effects of combining amiodarone and statins (inhibitors of cholesterol synthesis at the rate-limiting step of hydroxy-methyl-glutaryl CoA reductase) on desmosterol levels and investigated the mechanism(s) by which amiodarone interferes with the metabolism of desmosterol using in vitro studies. Methods and Results We report in a clinical case-control setting of 236 cardiac patients (126 with and 110 without amiodarone treatment) that amiodarone medication is accompanied by a robust increase in serum desmosterol levels independently of gender, age, body mass index, cardiac and other diseases, and the use of statins. Lipid analyses in patient samples taken before and after initiation of amiodarone therapy showed a systematic increase of desmosterol upon drug administration, strongly arguing for a direct causal link between amiodarone and desmosterol accumulation. Mechanistically, we found that amiodarone resulted in desmosterol accumulation in cultured human cells and that the compound directly inhibited the 24-dehydrocholesterol reductase (DHCR24) enzyme activity. Conclusion These novel findings demonstrate that amiodarone blocks the cholesterol synthesis pathway by inhibiting DHCR24, causing a robust accumulation of cellular desmosterol in cells and in the sera of amiodarone-treated patients. It is conceivable that the antiarrhythmic potential and side effects of amiodarone may in part result from inhibition of the cholesterol synthesis pathway.

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