Inhibition of liver x receptor/retinoid X receptor-mediated transcription contributes to the proatherogenic effects of arsenic in macrophages in vitro

Padovani, AM; Molina, MF; Mann, KK

HERO ID

710962

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2010

Language

English

PMID

20339114

HERO ID 710962
In Press No
Year 2010
Title Inhibition of liver x receptor/retinoid X receptor-mediated transcription contributes to the proatherogenic effects of arsenic in macrophages in vitro
Authors Padovani, AM; Molina, MF; Mann, KK
Journal Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology
Volume 30
Issue 6
Page Numbers 1228-1236
Abstract To determine whether arsenic inhibits transcriptional activation of the liver X receptor (LXR)/retinoid X receptor (RXR) heterodimers, thereby impairing cholesterol efflux from macrophages and potentially contributing to a proatherogenic phenotype.<br /><br /> Arsenic is an important environmental contaminant and has been linked to an increased incidence of atherosclerosis. Previous findings showed that arsenic inhibits transcriptional activation of type 2 nuclear receptors, known to heterodimerize with RXR. Environmentally relevant arsenic doses decrease the LXR/RXR ligand-induced expression of the LXR target genes (ABCA1 and SREBP-1c). Arsenic failed to decrease cAMP-induced ABCA1 expression, suggesting a selective LXR/RXR effect. This selectivity correlated with the ability of arsenic to decrease LXR/RXR ligand-induced, but not cAMP-induced, cholesterol efflux. By using chromatin immunoprecipitation assays, we found that arsenic inhibits the ability of LXR/RXR ligands to induce activation markers on the ABCA1 and SREBP-1c promoters and blocks ligand-induced release of the nuclear receptor coexpressor (NCoR) from the promoter. Arsenic did not alter the ability of LXR to transrepress inflammatory gene transcription, further supporting our hypothesis that RXR is the target for arsenic inhibition.<br /><br /> Exposure to arsenic enhances the risk of atherosclerosis. We present data that arsenic inhibits the transcriptional activity of the liver X receptor, resulting in decreased cholesterol-induced gene expression and efflux from macrophages. Therefore, arsenic may promote an athersclerotic environment by decreasing the ability of macrophages to efflux excess cholesterol, thereby favoring increased plaque formation.
Doi 10.1161/ATVBAHA.110.205500
Pmid 20339114
Wosid WOS:000277860900023
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Comments |WOS:000277860900023
Is Public Yes
Language Text English
Keyword atherosclerosis; macrophages; receptors; arsenic; liver X receptor
Is Qa No