High-fat diet reveals the impact of Sar1b defects on lipid and lipoprotein profile and cholesterol metabolism

J Lipid Res. 2023 Sep;64(9):100423. doi: 10.1016/j.jlr.2023.100423. Epub 2023 Aug 7.

Abstract

Biallelic pathogenic variants of the Sar1b gene cause chylomicron retention disease (CRD) whose central phenotype is the inability to secrete chylomicrons. Patients with CRD experience numerous clinical symptoms such as gastrointestinal, hepatic, neuromuscular, ophthalmic, and cardiological abnormalities. Recently, the production of mice expressing either a targeted deletion or mutation of Sar1b recapitulated biochemical and gastrointestinal defects associated with CRD. The present study was conducted to better understand little-known aspects of Sar1b mutations, including mouse embryonic development, lipid profile, and lipoprotein composition in response to high-fat diet, gut and liver cholesterol metabolism, sex-specific effects, and genotype-phenotype differences. Sar1b deletion and mutation produce a lethal phenotype in homozygous mice, which display intestinal lipid accumulation without any gross morphological abnormalities. On high-fat diet, mutant mice exhibit more marked abnormalities in body composition, adipose tissue and liver weight, plasma cholesterol, non-HDL cholesterol and polyunsaturated fatty acids than those on the regular Chow diet. Divergences were also noted in lipoprotein lipid composition, lipid ratios (serving as indices of particle size) and lipoprotein-apolipoprotein distribution. Sar1b defects significantly reduce gut cholesterol accumulation while altering key players in cholesterol metabolism. Noteworthy, variations were observed between males and females, and between Sar1b deletion and mutation phenotypes. Overall, mutant animal findings reveal the importance of Sar1b in several biochemical, metabolic and developmental processes.

Keywords: Sar1b gene; chylomicron; embryonic lethality; high-fat diet; intestinal fat malabsorption; lipoprotein composition.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Cholesterol / metabolism
  • Chylomicrons / metabolism
  • Diet, High-Fat* / adverse effects
  • Embryonic Development*
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Lipid Metabolism / genetics
  • Liver / metabolism
  • Male
  • Mice
  • Monomeric GTP-Binding Proteins* / genetics

Substances

  • Cholesterol
  • Chylomicrons
  • Sar1b protein, mouse
  • Monomeric GTP-Binding Proteins

Grants and funding