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Aster-dependent nonvesicular transport facilitates dietary cholesterol uptake.

Citation
Ferrari, A., et al. “Aster-Dependent Nonvesicular Transport Facilitates Dietary Cholesterol Uptake.”. Science (New York, N.y.), p. eadf0966.
Center UCSD-UCLA
Featured
Author Alessandra Ferrari, Emily Whang, Xu Xiao, John P Kennelly, Beatriz Romartinez-Alonso, Julia J Mack, Thomas Weston, Kai Chen, Youngjae Kim, Marcus J Tol, Lara Bideyan, Alexander Nguyen, Yajing Gao, Liujuan Cui, Alexander H Bedard, Jaspreet Sandhu, Stephen D Lee, Louise Fairall, Kevin J Williams, Wenxin Song, Priscilla Munguia, Robert A Russell, Martín G Martín, Michael E Jung, Haibo Jiang, John W R Schwabe, Stephen G Young, Peter Tontonoz
Abstract

Intestinal absorption is an important contributor to systemic cholesterol homeostasis. Niemann-Pick C1 Like 1 (NPC1L1) assists in the initial step of dietary cholesterol uptake, but how cholesterol moves downstream of NPC1L1 is unknown. We show that Aster-B and Aster-C are critical for nonvesicular cholesterol movement in enterocytes. Loss of NPC1L1 diminishes accessible plasma membrane (PM) cholesterol and abolishes Aster recruitment to the intestinal brush border. Enterocytes lacking Asters accumulate PM cholesterol and show endoplasmic reticulum cholesterol depletion. Aster-deficient mice have impaired cholesterol absorption and are protected against diet-induced hypercholesterolemia. Finally, the Aster pathway can be targeted with a small-molecule inhibitor to manipulate cholesterol uptake. These findings identify the Aster pathway as a physiologically important and pharmacologically tractable node in dietary lipid absorption.

Year of Publication
2023
Journal
Science (New York, N.Y.)
Volume
382
Issue
6671
Number of Pages
eadf0966
Date Published
11/2023
ISSN Number
1095-9203
DOI
10.1126/science.adf0966
Alternate Journal
Science
PMID
37943936
PMCID
PMC11073449
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