Can modulators of apolipoproteinB biogenesis serve as an alternate target for cholesterol-lowering drugs?

Understanding the molecular defects underlying cardiovascular disease is necessary for the development of therapeutics. The most common method to lower circulating lipids, which reduces the incidence of cardiovascular disease, is statins, but other drugs are now entering the clinic, some of which ha...

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Veröffentlicht in:Biochimica et biophysica acta 2018-07, Vol.1863 (7), p.762-771
Hauptverfasser: Doonan, Lynley M., Fisher, Edward A., Brodsky, Jeffrey L.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Understanding the molecular defects underlying cardiovascular disease is necessary for the development of therapeutics. The most common method to lower circulating lipids, which reduces the incidence of cardiovascular disease, is statins, but other drugs are now entering the clinic, some of which have been approved. Nevertheless, patients cannot tolerate some of these therapeutics, the drugs are costly, and/or the treatments are approved for only rare forms of disease. Efforts to find alternative treatments have focused on other factors, such as apolipoproteinB (apoB), which transports cholesterol in the blood stream. The levels of apoB are regulated by endoplasmic reticulum (ER) associated degradation as well as by a post ER degradation pathway in model systems, and we suggest that these events provide novel therapeutic targets. We discuss first how cardiovascular disease arises and how cholesterol is regulated, and then summarize the mechanisms of action of existing treatments for cardiovascular disease. We then review the apoB biosynthetic pathway, focusing on steps that might be amenable to therapeutic interventions. •ApolipoproteinB levels correlate with serum cholesterol and cardiovascular disease.•ApolipoproteinB is regulated by two cellular degradation pathways.•Statins are used to reduce serum cholesterol but other therapies should be considered.•Alternate therapies may regulate ApolipoproteinB levels directly or via degradation.
ISSN:1388-1981
0006-3002
1879-2618
1878-2434
DOI:10.1016/j.bbalip.2018.03.010