Potent peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-α agonist treatment increases cholesterol efflux capacity in humans with the metabolic syndrome

AV Khera, JS Millar, G Ruotolo, MD Wang… - European heart …, 2015 - academic.oup.com
AV Khera, JS Millar, G Ruotolo, MD Wang, DJ Rader
European heart journal, 2015academic.oup.com
Aims Fibrate medications weakly stimulate the nuclear receptor peroxisome proliferator-
activated receptor-α (PPAR-α) and are currently employed clinically in patients with
dyslipidaemia. The potent and selective agonist of PPAR-α LY518674 is known to
substantially increase apolipoprotein AI (apoA-I) turnover without major impact on steady-
state levels of apoA-I or high-density lipoprotein-cholesterol (HDL-C). We sought to
determine whether therapy with a PPAR-α agonist impacts cholesterol efflux capacity, a …
Aims
Fibrate medications weakly stimulate the nuclear receptor peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-α (PPAR-α) and are currently employed clinically in patients with dyslipidaemia. The potent and selective agonist of PPAR-α LY518674 is known to substantially increase apolipoprotein A-I (apoA-I) turnover without major impact on steady-state levels of apoA-I or high-density lipoprotein-cholesterol (HDL-C). We sought to determine whether therapy with a PPAR-α agonist impacts cholesterol efflux capacity, a marker of HDL function.
Methods and results
Cholesterol efflux capacity was measured at baseline and after 8 weeks of therapy in a randomized, placebo-controlled trial involving participants with metabolic syndrome treated with either LY518674 100 μg daily (n = 13) or placebo (n = 15). Efflux capacity assessment was quantified using a previously validated ex vivo assay that measures the ability of apolipoprotein-B depleted plasma to mobilize cholesterol from macrophages. LY518674 led to a 15.7% increase from baseline (95% CI 3.3–28.1%; P = 0.02, P vs. placebo = 0.01) in efflux capacity. The change in apoA-I production rate in the active treatment arm was strongly linked to change in cholesterol efflux capacity (r = 0.67, P = 0.01).
Conclusions
Potent stimulation of PPAR-α leads to accelerated turnover of apoA-I and an increase in cholesterol efflux capacity in metabolic syndrome patients despite no change in HDL-C or apoA-I levels. This finding reinforces the notion that changes in HDL-C levels may poorly predict impact on functionality and thus has implications for ongoing pharmacologic efforts to enhance apoA-I metabolism.
Oxford University Press