Cafestol, a diterpene present in unfiltered coffee brews such as Scandinavian boiled, Turkish, and cafetière coffee, is the most potent cholesterol-elevating compound known in the human diet. Several genes involved in cholesterol homeostasis have previously been shown to be targets of cafestol, including cholesterol 7alpha-hydroxylase (CYP7A1), the rate-limiting enzyme in bile acid biosynthesis. We have examined the mechanism by which cafestol elevates serum lipid levels. Changes in several lipid parameters were observed in cafestol-treated APOE3Leiden mice, including a significant increase in serum triglyceride levels. Microarray analysis of these mice identified alterations in hepatic expression of genes involved in lipid metabolism and detoxification, many of which are regulated by the nuclear hormone receptors farnesoid X receptor (FXR) and pregnane X receptor (PXR). Further studies demonstrate that cafestol is an agonist ligand for FXR and PXR, and that cafestol down-regulates expression of the bile acid homeostatic genes CYP7A1, sterol 12alpha-hydroxylase, and Na(+)-taurocholate cotransporting polypeptide in the liver of wild-type but not FXR null mice. Cafestol did not affect genes known to be up-regulated by FXR in the liver of wild-type mice, but did increase expression of the positive FXR-target genes intestinal bile acid-binding protein and fibroblast growth factor 15 (FGF15) in the intestine. Because FGF15 has recently been shown to function in an enterohepatic regulatory pathway to repress liver expression of bile acid homeostatic genes, its direct induction in the gut may account for indirect effects of cafestol on liver gene expression. PXR-dependent gene regulation of cytochrome P450 3A11 and other targets by cafestol was also only seen in the intestine. Using a double FXR/PXR knockout mouse model, we found that both receptors contribute to the cafestol-dependent induction of intestinal FGF15 gene expression. In conclusion, cafestol acts as an agonist ligand for both FXR and PXR, and this may contribute to its impact on cholesterol homeostasis.
To dissect the multigenic control of colon tumour susceptibility in the mouse we used the set of 20 CcS/Dem (CcS) recombinant congenic (RC) strains. Each CcS strain carries a unique, random subset of approximately 12.5% of the genome of strain STS/A (STS) on the genetic background of BALB/cHeA (BALB/c). Previously, applying a protocol of 26 injections of 1,2-dimethylhydrazine (DMH), we detected two susceptibility loci, Scc1 and Scc2, on chromosome 2 (refs 4, 5). Using a shorter tumour-induction procedure, combining DMH and N-ethyl-N-nitrosourea (ENU) treatment, we demonstrate that BALB/c, STS and most CcS strains are relatively resistant. The strain CcS-19, however, is susceptible, probably due to a combination of BALB/c and STS alleles at several loci. Analysis of 192 (BALB/c x CcS-19) F2 mice revealed, in addition to the Scc1/Scc2 region, three new susceptibility loci: Scc3 on chromosome 1, Scc4 on chromosome 17 and Scc5 on chromosome 18. Scc4 and Scc5 have no apparent individual effect, but show a strong reciprocal interaction. Their BALB/c and STS alleles are not a priori susceptible or resistant but the genotype at one locus determines the effect of the allele at the second locus and vice versa. These findings and the accompanying paper on lung tumour susceptibility show that interlocus interactions are likely to be an important component of tumour susceptibility.
The genetic control of susceptibility to many common diseases, including cancer, is multigenic both in humans and in animals. This genetic complexity has presented a major obstacle in mapping the relevant genes. As a consequence, most geneticists and molecular biologists presently focus on "single gene" diseases. To make the multigenic diseases accessible to genetic and molecular analysis, we developed a novel genetic tool, the recombinant congenic strains (RCS) in the mouse (4). The RC strains are produced by inbreeding of mice of the second backcross generation between two inbred strains, one of which serves as the "donor" and the other as the "background" strain. A series of RCS consists of approximately 20 strains, each carrying a different set of genes: approximately 12.5% genes from the common donor inbred strain, the remaining 87.5% from the common background inbred strain. As the set of donor strain genes in each RC strain is different, the nonlinked genes of the donor strain involved in the control of a multigenic trait, e.g., cancer susceptibility, become distributed into different RC strains where they can be analyzed one by one. Hence, the RCS system transforms a multigenic trait into a series of single gene traits, where each gene contributing to the multigenic control can be mapped and studied separately. Recently we demonstrated that the RCS system is indeed capable of resolving multigenic traits, which are hardly analyzable otherwise, by mapping four new colon tumor susceptibility loci (8; P. C. Groot, C. J. A. Moen, W. Dietrich, L. F. M. van Zutphen, E. S. Lander, and P. Demant, unpublished results). For successful application of the RCS system, extensive genetic characterization of the individual recombinant congenic strains is essential. In this paper we present detailed information about the genetic composition of three series of RC strains on the basis of typing of 120-180 markers distributed along all autosomes. The data indicate that the relative representation of the donor strain genes in the RC strains does not deviate from the theoretical expectation, and that the RC strains achieved a very high degree of genetic homogeneity and for all practical purposes can be considered inbred strains. The density and distribution of markers reported here permits an effective mapping of unknown genes of donor strain origin at almost all autosomal locations. Much of this information has been obtained using the new class of genetic markers, the simple sequence repeat polymorphisms.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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