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Query: UMLS:C0406810 (
NAME
)
13,345
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Cholesterol is essential for all mammalian cells. Cellular cholesterol requirements are met through de novo synthesis and uptake of plasma lipoproteins, homeostatic responses that are transcriptionally regulated by the sterol regulatory element-binding proteins (SREBPs). To prevent cytotoxicity attributable to accumulation of excess cholesterol, liver X receptors (LXRs) and the farnesoid X receptor (FXR), together with other members of the
nuclear receptor
superfamily, promote the storage, transport, and catabolism of sterols and their metabolites. Members of this metabolic
nuclear receptor
family include receptors for oxysterols (LXRs), bile acids (
CAR
, FXR, and PXR), and fatty acids (PPARs). Through coordinated regulation of transcriptional programs, these nuclear receptors regulate key aspects of cellular and whole-body sterol homeostasis, including cholesterol absorption, lipoprotein synthesis and remodeling, lipoprotein uptake by peripheral tissues, reverse cholesterol transport, and bile acid synthesis and absorption. This review focuses on the nuclear receptors that are central to the lipid metabolic signaling cascades, communication between lipid metabolites and their receptors, and the role of nuclear receptors in orchestrating the complex transcriptional programs that govern cholesterol and bile acid metabolism.
...
PMID:Nuclear receptor signaling in the control of cholesterol homeostasis: have the orphans found a home? 1545 87
A traditional herbal medicine enhances bilirubin clearance by activating the
nuclear receptor
CAR
. Yin Zhi Huang, a decoction of Yin Chin (Artemisia capillaris) and three other herbs, is widely used in Asia to prevent and treat neonatal jaundice. We recently identified the constitutive androstane receptor (
CAR
, NR1I3) as a key regulator of bilirubin clearance in the liver. Here we show that treatment of WT and humanized
CAR
transgenic mice with Yin Zhi Huang for 3 days accelerates the clearance of intravenously infused bilirubin. This effect is absent in
CAR
knockout animals. Expression of bilirubin glucuronyl transferase and other components of the bilirubin metabolism pathway is induced by Yin Zhi Huang treatment of WT mice or mice expressing only human
CAR
, but not
CAR
knockout animals. 6,7-Dimethylesculetin, a compound present in Yin Chin, activates
CAR
in primary hepatocytes from both WT and humanized
CAR
mice and accelerates bilirubin clearance in vivo. We conclude that
CAR
mediates the effects of Yin Zhi Huang on bilirubin clearance and that 6,7-dimethylesculetin is an active component of this herbal medicine.
CAR
is a potential target for the development of new drugs to treat neonatal, genetic, or acquired forms of jaundice. [Abstract reproduced by permission of J Clin Invest 2004;113:137-143].
...
PMID:Yin Zhi Huang and other plant-derived preparations: where herbal and molecular medicine meet. 1546 57
Xenobiotic nuclear receptors (PXR,
CAR
, and the Ah receptor) coordinately induce genes involved in all phases of xenobiotic metabolism including oxidative metabolism, conjugation, and transport. The comment--dedicated to honor the memory of Herbert Remmer, mentor of the author K. W. B.--discusses mechanistic, functional, and evolutionary aspects of xenobiotic nuclear receptors which induce UGTs together with CYPs and glucuronide transporters in human and rodent liver and intestine. Recent findings on regulation of CYPs, UGTs, and transporters suggest that while
nuclear receptor
signaling induces different CYPs, regulation may converge on single UGTs and transporters. Functional consequences of co-regulation are discussed using examples from the metabolism of xeno- and endobiotics (drugs, bilirubin, bile salts, steroid hormones, and carcinogens). Animal-plant interactions may have been a major driving force in the evolutionary divergence of CYPs and UGTs in mammals and insects as well as in their regulation by nuclear receptors. In addition, regulation by nuclear receptors was probably shaped by the need for homeostatic control of endobiotic signals in the evolution of multicellular organisms.
...
PMID:Coordinate regulation of drug metabolism by xenobiotic nuclear receptors: UGTs acting together with CYPs and glucuronide transporters. 1555 38
Cloning and characterization of the orphan nuclear receptors constitutive androstane receptor (
CAR
, NR1I3) and pregnane X receptor (PXR, NR1I2) led to major breakthroughs in studying drug-mediated transcriptional induction of drug-metabolizing cytochromes P450 (CYPs). More recently, additional roles for
CAR
and PXR have been discovered. As examples, these xenosensors are involved in the homeostasis of cholesterol, bile acids, bilirubin, and other endogenous hydrophobic molecules in the liver:
CAR
and PXR thus form an intricate regulatory network with other members of the
nuclear receptor
superfamily, foremost the cholesterol-sensing liver X receptor (LXR, NR1H2/3) and the bile-acid-activated farnesoid X receptor (FXR, NR1H4). In this review, functional interactions between these nuclear receptors as well as the consequences on physiology and pathophysiology of the liver are discussed.
...
PMID:Regulatory network of lipid-sensing nuclear receptors: roles for CAR, PXR, LXR, and FXR. 1558 95
Drugs and bile acids are taken up into hepatocytes by specialized transport proteins localized at the basolateral membrane, e.g., organic anion transporting polypeptides . Following intracellular metabolism by cytochrome P450 (CYP) enzymes, drug metabolites are excreted into bile or urine via ATP-dependent multidrug resistance proteins (MDR1 and MRPs). Bile acids are excreted mainly via the bile salt export pump (BSEP, ABCB11). The genes coding for drug and bile acid transporters and CYP enzymes are regulated by a complex network of transcriptional cascades, notably by the ligand-activated nuclear receptors FXR, PXR, and
CAR
and by the ligand-independent
nuclear receptor
HNF-4alpha. The bile acid synthesizing enzymes CYP7A1, CYP8B1, and CYP27A1 are subject to negative feedback regulation by bile acids, which is partly mediated through the transcriptional repressor SHP. The role of transcriptional cofactors, such as SRC-1 and PGC-1, in mediating the gene-specific effects of individual nuclear receptors is becoming increasingly evident.
...
PMID:Coordinate transcriptional regulation of bile acid homeostasis and drug metabolism. 1558 96
The mouse
nuclear receptor
CAR
(constitutively active receptor) is a transcription factor that is activated by phenobarbital-type inducers such as TCPOBOP {1,4 bis[2-(3,5-dichloropyridyloxy)]benzene} in liver in vivo. However,
CAR
is constitutively active in cell-based transfection assays, the molecular mechanism for which has not been elucidated yet. In the model structure of
CAR
, Thr176 constitutes a part of the ligand-binding surface, but its side chain is not directed toward the surface, instead it forms a hydrogen bond with Thr350 in the AF2 (activation function 2) domain of
CAR
. Thr350 is known to regulate
CAR
activity [Ueda, Kakizaki, Negishi, and Sueyoshi (2002) Mol. Pharmacol. 61, 1284-1288]. Thr176 was mutated to various amino acids to examine whether this interaction played a role in conferring the constitutive activity. Hydrophobic and positively charged amino acids at position 176 abrogated the constitutive activity, whereas polar and negatively charged amino acids retained it. When one of the small hydrophobic amino acids, such as alanine or valine, was substituted for threonine, the mutants were fully activated by TCPOBOP. The co-activator SRC-1 (steroid receptor co-activator-1) regulated the activity changes associated with the mutations. Thr248 and Ser230 are the Thr176-corresponding residues in human pregnane X receptor and mouse vitamin D3 receptor respectively, interacting directly with the conserved threonine in the AF2 domains. Thr248 and Ser230 also regulated the ligand-dependent activity of these receptors by augmenting binding of the receptors to SRC-1. Thr176, Thr248 and Ser230 are conserved residues in the NR1I (
nuclear receptor
1I) subfamily members and determine their activity.
...
PMID:Thr176 regulates the activity of the mouse nuclear receptor CAR and is conserved in the NR1I subfamily members PXR and VDR. 1561 65
The
nuclear receptor
CAR
is a xenobiotic responsive transcription factor that plays a central role in the clearance of drugs and bilirubin while promoting cocaine and acetaminophen toxicity. In addition,
CAR
has established a "reverse" paradigm of
nuclear receptor
action where the receptor is active in the absence of ligand and inactive when bound to inverse agonists. We now report the crystal structure of murine
CAR
bound to the inverse agonist androstenol. Androstenol binds within the ligand binding pocket, but unlike many
nuclear receptor
ligands, it makes no contacts with helix H12/AF2. The transition from constitutive to basal activity (androstenol bound) appears to be associated with a ligand-induced kink between helices H10 and H11. This disrupts the previously predicted salt bridge that locks H12 in the transcriptionally active conformation. This mechanism of inverse agonism is distinct from traditional
nuclear receptor
antagonists thereby offering a new approach to receptor modulation.
...
PMID:Structure of the murine constitutive androstane receptor complexed to androstenol: a molecular basis for inverse agonism. 1561 Jul 34
Constitutive active (or androstane) receptor (
CAR
, NR1I3), a member of the
nuclear receptor
family, is a major regulator for induction of cytochrome P450 2B (CYP2B) genes by phenobarbital. Phenobarbital-like inducer, 1,4-bis[2-(3,5-dichloropyridyloxy)]benzene is a potent mouse
CAR
ligand that has been used to study
CAR
target genes in mice but does not activate human
CAR
(hCAR) or rat
CAR
(rCAR). Although 6-(4-chlorophenyl) imidazo[2,1-b][1,3]thiazole-5-carbaldehyde O-(3,4-dichlorobenzyl)oxime (CITCO) was reported to be an hCAR agonistic ligand, activation of hCAR by CITCO in cell-based reporter assay was weak. Therefore, we performed a screening of 50 drugs and chemicals using cell-based reporter assays to identify activators of hCAR. Among them, HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors (cerivastatin, simvastatin, fluvastatin, and atorvastatin) enhanced the hCAR-mediated transcriptional activation of phenobarbital-responsive enhancer module reporter gene by up to 3-fold. Similar activation by HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors was also observed with mouse and rat CARs. On the other hand, pravastatin did not activate hCAR at the concentrations tested (up to 30 microM). The extent of activation by the HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors was stronger than that by CITCO. Cerivastatin, simvastatin, fluvastatin, and atorvastatin induced CYP2B6 mRNA in stable hCAR-expressed FLC7 cells but not in original FLC7 cells. Therefore, we concluded that
CAR
mediates the effects of HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors on the induction of CYP2B genes, although HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors also activate pregnane X receptor. HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors such as cerivastatin would be useful to study for elucidating molecular and cellular mechanisms of hCAR.
...
PMID:Identification of HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors as activators for human, mouse and rat constitutive androstane receptor. 1580 84
Guggulsterone is the active ingredient in gugulipid, an organic extract of the Commiphora mukul plant. Gugulipid has been used for nearly 3000 years in Ayurvedic medicine, mainly as a treatment for arthritis. Herbal practitioners currently use gugulipid therapy in conditions as diverse as rheumatism, coronary artery disease, arthritis, hyperlipidemia, acne, and obesity. The active ingredient in gugulipid is guggulsterone, a plant sterol compound recently identified as a pregnane X receptor (PXR; NR1I2) ligand. We show herein that guggulsterone treatment represses the expression of cytochrome P450 2b10 (Cyp2b10) gene expression by inhibiting constitutive androstane receptor (
CAR
; NR1I3) activity in hepatocytes lacking functional PXR (PXR-knockout). We also show that PXR-
CAR
cross-talk determines the net activity of guggulsterone treatment toward Cyp2b10 gene expression. Using mammalian two-hybrid assays, we show that treatment with guggulsterone differentially affects protein cofactor recruitment to these two nuclear receptors. These data identify guggulsterone as an inverse agonist of the
nuclear receptor
CAR
. When viewed together with the data showing that PXR and
CAR
expression is highly variable in different ethnic populations and that
CAR
expression is under the control of a circadian rhythm, our data provide important insight into the molecular mechanism of interindividual variability of drug metabolism. These data, together with the recent resolution of the crystal structures of PXR and
CAR
, will likely aid in the rational design of more specific
CAR
inverse agonists that are currently viewed as potential antiobesity drugs.
...
PMID:The ratio of constitutive androstane receptor to pregnane X receptor determines the activity of guggulsterone against the Cyp2b10 promoter. 1583 98
By comparison with its older and better-behaved cousins in the
nuclear receptor
superfamily,
CAR
(NR1I3) has always been an oddball. Three new crystal structures recently described in Molecular Cell reveal the molecular basis for some of its bad habits (Xu et al., 2004; Suino et al., 2004; Shan et al., 2004).
...
PMID:CAR: three new models for a problem child. 1605 39
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