Chen_2012_Metabolism_61_470

Reference

Title : Small molecule activation of lecithin cholesterol acyltransferase modulates lipoprotein metabolism in mice and hamsters - Chen_2012_Metabolism_61_470
Author(s) : Chen Z , Wang SP , Krsmanovic ML , Castro-Perez J , Gagen K , Mendoza V , Rosa R , Shah V , He T , Stout SJ , Geoghagen NS , Lee SH , McLaren DG , Wang L , Roddy TP , Plump AS , Hubbard BK , Sinz CJ , Johns DG
Ref : Metabolism , 61 :470 , 2012
Abstract :

The objective was to assess whether pharmacological activation of lecithin cholesterol acyltransferase (LCAT) could exert beneficial effects on lipoprotein metabolism. A putative small molecule activator (compound A) was used as a tool compound in in vitro and in vivo studies. Compound A increased LCAT activity in vitro in plasma from mouse, hamster, rhesus monkey, and human. To assess the acute pharmacodynamic effects of compound A, C57Bl/6 mice and hamsters received a single dose (20 mg/kg) of compound A. Both species displayed a significant increase in high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDLc) and a significant decrease in non-HDLc and triglycerides acutely after dosing; these changes tracked with ex vivo plasma LCAT activity. To examine compound A's chronic effect on lipoprotein metabolism, hamsters received a daily dosing of vehicle or of 20 or 60 mg/kg of compound A for 2 weeks. At study termination, compound treatment resulted in a significant increase in HDLc, HDL particle size, plasma apolipoprotein A-I level, and plasma cholesteryl ester (CE) to free cholesterol ratio, and a significant reduction in very low-density lipoprotein cholesterol. The increase in plasma CE mirrored the increase in HDL CE. Triglycerides trended toward a dose-dependent decrease in very low-density lipoprotein and HDL, with multiple triglyceride species reaching statistical significance. Gallbladder bile acids content displayed a significant and more than 2-fold increase with the 60 mg/kg treatment. We characterized pharmacological activation of LCAT by a small molecule extensively for the first time, and our findings support the potential of this approach in treating dyslipidemia and atherosclerosis; our analyses also provide mechanistic insight on LCAT's role in lipoprotein metabolism.

PubMedSearch : Chen_2012_Metabolism_61_470
PubMedID: 22001333

Related information

Chemical SCHEMBL1719815

Citations formats

Chen Z, Wang SP, Krsmanovic ML, Castro-Perez J, Gagen K, Mendoza V, Rosa R, Shah V, He T, Stout SJ, Geoghagen NS, Lee SH, McLaren DG, Wang L, Roddy TP, Plump AS, Hubbard BK, Sinz CJ, Johns DG (2012)
Small molecule activation of lecithin cholesterol acyltransferase modulates lipoprotein metabolism in mice and hamsters
Metabolism 61 :470

Chen Z, Wang SP, Krsmanovic ML, Castro-Perez J, Gagen K, Mendoza V, Rosa R, Shah V, He T, Stout SJ, Geoghagen NS, Lee SH, McLaren DG, Wang L, Roddy TP, Plump AS, Hubbard BK, Sinz CJ, Johns DG (2012)
Metabolism 61 :470