TRAK2, a novel regulator of ABCA1 expression, cholesterol efflux and HDL biogenesis

Moses, EK; Taylor, RL; Low, H; Bozaoglu, K; Blangero, J; Murphy, AJ; Johnson, MP; Kulkarni, H; Lake, NJ; Almeida, M; Mahaney, MC; Dyer, TD; Curran, JE; Hoang, A; Sviridov, D; Harikrishnan, KN; Trahair, H; Mukhamedova, N; Jowett, JBM; Göring, HHH
Abstract
Aims: The recent failures of HDL-raising therapies have underscored our incomplete understanding of HDL biology. Therefore there is an urgent need to comprehensively investigate HDL metabolism to enable the development of effective HDL-centric therapies. To identify novel regulators of HDL metabolism, we performed a joint analysis of human genetic, transcriptomic, and plasma HDL-cholesterol (HDL-C) concentration data and identified a novel association between trafficking protein, kinesin binding 2 (TRAK2) and HDL-C concentration. Here we characterize the molecular basis of the novel association between TRAK2 and HDL-cholesterol concentration. Methods and results: Analysis of lymphocyte transcriptomic data together with plasma HDL from the San Antonio Family Heart Study (n = 1240) revealed a significant negative correlation between TRAK2 mRNA levels and HDL-C concentration, HDL particle diameter and HDL subspecies heterogeneity. TRAK2 siRNA-mediated knockdown significantly increased cholesterol efflux to apolipoprotein A-I and isolated HDL from human macrophage (THP-1) and liver (HepG2) cells by increasing the mRNA and protein expression of the cholesterol transporter ATP-binding cassette, sub-family A member 1 (ABCA1). The effect of TRAK2 knockdown on cholesterol efflux was abolished in the absence of ABCA1, indicating that TRAK2 functions in an ABCA1-dependent efflux pathway. TRAK2 knockdown significantly increased liver X receptor (LXR) binding at the ABCA1 promoter, establishing TRAK2 as a regulator of LXR-mediated transcription of ABCA1. Conclusion: We show, for the first time, that TRAK2 is a novel regulator of LXR-mediated ABCA1 expression, cholesterol efflux, and HDL biogenesis. TRAK2 may therefore be an important target in the development of anti-atherosclerotic therapies.
Journal EUR HEART J
ISSN 0195-668X
Published 21 Dec 2017
Volume 38
Issue 48
Pages 3579-87
DOI 10.1093/eurheartj/ehx315
Type Journal Article
Sponsorship
NHMRC: 1022812, 1020284, 1020285; NHF: G 10M 5182