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Ovarian granulosa cells utilize scavenger receptor SR-BI to evade cellular cholesterol homeostatic control for steroid synthesis.


ABSTRACT: Cellular cholesterol is known to be under homeostatic control in nonsteroidogenic cells, and this intrigued us to understand how such control works in steroidogenic cells that additionally use cholesterol for steroid hormone synthesis. We employed primary culture of rat ovarian granulosa cells to study how steroidogenic cells adapt to acquire sufficient cholesterol to meet the demand of active steroidogenesis under the stimulation of gonadotropin follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) and cytokine transforming growth factor (TGF)?1. We found that TGF?1 potentiated FSH to upregulate scavenger receptor class B member I (SR-BI) and LDL receptor (LDLR), both functional in uptaking cholesterol as hHDL(3) and hLDL supplementation enhanced progesterone production, and the effect of each lipoprotein was completely or partially blocked by SR-BI selective inhibitor BLT-1. Uptaken cholesterol could also be stored in lipid droplets. Importantly, LDLR and SR-BI responded to sterol with different sensitivity. Giving cells lipoproteins or 25-hydroxycholesterol downregulated Ldlr but not Scarb1; Scarb1 was ultimately downregulated by excessive sterol accumulation under 25-hydroxycholesterol and aminoglutethimide (inhibitor of steroidogenesis) cotreatment. Furthermore, transcription factors sterol regulatory element-binding protein (SREBP)-2 and liver receptor homolog (LRH)-1 crucially mediated Ldlr and Scarb1 differential response to sterol challenge. This study reveals that ovarian granulosa cells retain the cholesterol homeostatic control machinery like nonsteroidogenic cells, although during active steroidogenesis, they utilize SR-BI to evade such feedback control.

SUBMITTER: Lai WA 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC3588866 | biostudies-literature | 2013 Feb

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Ovarian granulosa cells utilize scavenger receptor SR-BI to evade cellular cholesterol homeostatic control for steroid synthesis.

Lai Wei-An WA   Yeh Yi-Ting YT   Lee Ming-Ting MT   Wu Leang-Shin LS   Ke Ferng-Chun FC   Hwang Jiuan-Jiuan JJ  

Journal of lipid research 20121128 2


Cellular cholesterol is known to be under homeostatic control in nonsteroidogenic cells, and this intrigued us to understand how such control works in steroidogenic cells that additionally use cholesterol for steroid hormone synthesis. We employed primary culture of rat ovarian granulosa cells to study how steroidogenic cells adapt to acquire sufficient cholesterol to meet the demand of active steroidogenesis under the stimulation of gonadotropin follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) and cytokine t  ...[more]

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