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Submitted on January 10, 2002
Accepted on February 25, 2002
From UR545 INSERM, Département d'Athérosclérose,
Institut Pasteur de Lille, and Faculté de Pharmacie, Université de
Lille II, Lille, France.
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: bart.staels{at}pasteur-lille.fr.
AbstractPeroxisome
proliferator--activated receptors (PPARs) are nuclear receptors
activated by fatty acids and derivatives. Although PPAR
mediates the hypolipidemic action of fibrates, PPAR
is the receptor
for the antidiabetic glitazones. PPAR
is highly expressed in tissues
such as liver, muscle, kidney, and heart, where it stimulates the
ß-oxidative degradation of fatty acids. PPAR
is predominantly
expressed in adipose tissues, where it promotes adipocyte
differentiation and lipid storage. PPARß/
is expressed in a wide
range of tissues, and recent findings indicate a role for this receptor
in the control of adipogenesis. Pharmacological and gene-targeting
studies have demonstrated a physiological role for
PPARs in lipid and lipoprotein metabolism. PPAR
controls
plasma lipid transport by acting on triglyceride and fatty
acid metabolism and by modulating bile acid synthesis and
catabolism in the liver. All 3 PPARs regulate macrophage
cholesterol homeostasis. By enhancing
cholesterol efflux, they stimulate the critical steps of
the reverse cholesterol transport pathway. As such, PPARs
control plasma levels of cholesterol and
triglycerides, which constitute major risk factors for
coronary heart disease. Furthermore, PPAR
and PPAR
regulate the expression of key proteins involved in all stages of
atherogenesis, such as monocyte and lymphocyte recruitment to the
arterial wall, foam cell formation, vascular inflammation,
and thrombosis. Thus, by regulating gene transcription, PPARs modulate
the onset and evolution of metabolic disorders predisposing
to atherosclerosis and exert direct antiatherogenic
actions at the level of the vascular
wall.
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