4.7 Article

Enterohepatic Transcription Factor CREB3L3 Protects Atherosclerosis via SREBP Competitive Inhibition

Journal

Publisher

ELSEVIER INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.jcmgh.2020.11.004

Keywords

CREB3L3; SREBP; Hyperlipidemia; Enterohepatic Circulation

Funding

  1. Ministry of Science, Education, Culture and Technology of Japan [25282214, 16H03253, 17H06395, 18H04051]
  2. AMED-CREST
  3. Japan Heart Foundation/Novartis Grant for Research Award on Molecular and Cellular Cardiology
  4. Uehara Memorial Foundation
  5. Ono Medical Research Foundation
  6. Mochida Memorial Foundation for Medical and Pharmaceutical Research
  7. Suzuken Memorial Foundation
  8. Senshin Medical Research Foundation
  9. Takeda Science Foundation
  10. Japan Foundation for Applied Enzymology
  11. Banyu Life Science Foundation International
  12. Yamaguchi Endocrine Research Foundation
  13. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [16H03253, 18H04051, 25282214, 17H06395] Funding Source: KAKEN

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CREB3L3 plays a crucial role in lipid metabolism in the liver and small intestine, controlling hepatic triglyceride and glucose metabolism. Ablation of CREB3L3 exacerbates hyperlipidemia and accelerates atherosclerosis in LDLR-/- mice, while hepatic nuclear CREB3L3 overexpression suppresses atherosclerosis. CREB3L3 has protective effects against atherosclerosis through its interaction with SREBPs under atherogenic conditions.
BACKGROUND & AIMS: cAMP responsive element-binding protein 3 like 3 (CREB3L3) is a membrane-bound transcription factor involved in the maintenance of lipid metabolism in the liver and small intestine. CREB3L3 controls hepatic triglyceride and glucose metabolism by activating plasma fibroblast growth factor 21 (FGF21) and lipoprotein lipase. In this study, we intended to clarify its effect on atherosclerosis. METHODS: CREB3L3-deficifient, liver-specific CREB3L3 knockout, intestine-specific CREB3L3 knockout, both liver- and intestine-specific CREB3L3 knockout, and liver CREB3L3 transgenic mice were crossed with LDLR-/- mice. These mice were fed with a Western diet to develop atherosclerosis. RESULTS: CREB3L3 ablation in LDLR-/- mice exacerbated hyperlipidemia with accumulation of remnant APOB-containing lipoprotein. This led to the development of enhanced aortic atheroma formation, the extent of which was additive between liver- and intestine-specific deletion. Conversely, hepatic nuclear CREB3L3 overexpression markedly suppressed atherosclerosis with amelioration of hyperlipidemia. CREB3L3 directly upregulates anti-atherogenic FGF21 and APOA4. In contrast, it antagonizes hepatic sterol regulatory element-binding protein (SREBP)-mediated lipogenic and cholesterogenic genes and regulates intestinal liver X receptor-regulated genes involved in the transport of cholesterol. CREB3L3 deficiency results in the accumulation of nuclear SREBP proteins. Because both transcriptional factors share the cleavage system for nuclear transactivation, full-length CREB3L3 and SREBPs in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) functionally inhibit each other. CREB3L3 promotes the formation of the SREBP-insulin induced gene 1 complex to suppress SREBPs for ER-Golgi transport, resulting in ER retention and inhibition of proteolytic activation at the Golgi and vice versa. CONCLUSIONS: CREB3L3 has multi-potent protective effects against atherosclerosis owing to new mechanistic interaction between CREB3L3 and SREBPs under atherogenic conditions.

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