Journal of Lipid Research (Nov 2018)

NPC1L1-dependent intestinal cholesterol absorption requires ganglioside GM3 in membrane microdomains

  • Wataru Nihei,
  • Masakazu Nagafuku,
  • Hirotaka Hayamizu,
  • Yuta Odagiri,
  • Yumi Tamura,
  • Yui Kikuchi,
  • Lucas Veillon,
  • Hirotaka Kanoh,
  • Kei-ichiro Inamori,
  • Kenta Arai,
  • Kazuya Kabayama,
  • Koichi Fukase,
  • Jin-ichi Inokuchi

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 59, no. 11
pp. 2181 – 2187

Abstract

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Intestinal cholesterol absorption is a key regulator of systemic cholesterol homeostasis. Excessive dietary cholesterol and its intestinal uptake lead to hypercholesterolemia, a major risk factor for cardiovascular disease. Intestinal cholesterol uptake is mediated by Niemann-Pick C1-like 1 (NPC1L1), a transmembrane protein localized in membrane microdomains (lipid rafts) enriched in gangliosides and cholesterol. The roles of gangliosides, such as monosialodihexosylganglioside (GM3) and its synthesizing enzyme GM3 synthase (GM3S), in NPC1L1-dependent cholesterol uptake have not been examined previously. Here, we examined NPC1L1-dependent cholesterol uptake in a cell model as well as in wild-type and apoE-deficient mice fed normal or high-cholesterol diets. We showed that NPC1L1-dependent cholesterol uptake was impaired in GM3S-deficient cells and that GM3S deficiency promoted resistance to hypercholesterolemia in both wild-type and apoE-deficient mice fed the high-cholesterol but not the normal diet. Our findings suggest that GM3 and related gangliosides are essential for NPC1L1-mediated intestinal cholesterol absorption and are potential targets for hypercholesterolemia therapy.

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