Publication | Closed Access
Disorders of Cholesterol Metabolism and Their Unanticipated Convergent Mechanisms of Disease
95
Citations
87
References
2014
Year
Genetic EpidemiologyPathologyHyperlipidemiaMetabolic SyndromeCellular Cholesterol HomeostasisMetabolismAtherosclerosisDyslipidemiaLipid DisorderHealth SciencesOxysterolBiochemistryInherited Metabolic DiseaseVascular BiologyCell BiologyCholesterol BiosynthesisCholesterol MetabolismLipid MetabolismCardiovascular DiseaseMetabolic DiseasePhysiologyLipid DisordersLipoprotein MetabolismSystems BiologyMedicineDistinct Pathogenic CascadesLipid Synthesis
Cholesterol plays a key role in many cellular processes, and is generated by cells through de novo biosynthesis or acquired from exogenous sources through the uptake of low-density lipoproteins. Cholesterol biosynthesis is a complex, multienzyme-catalyzed pathway involving a series of sequentially acting enzymes. Inherited defects in genes encoding cholesterol biosynthetic enzymes or other regulators of cholesterol homeostasis result in severe metabolic diseases, many of which are rare in the general population and currently without effective therapy. Historically, these diseases have been viewed as discrete disorders, each with its own genetic cause and distinct pathogenic cascades that lead to its specific clinical features. However, studies have recently shown that three of these diseases have an unanticipated mechanistic convergence. This surprising finding is not only shedding light on details of cellular cholesterol homeostasis but also suggesting novel approaches to therapy.
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