Phosphatidylcholine (PC)1 is the most abundant phospholipid in mammalian cellular membranes. Besides having a structural role in membranes and lipoproteins (1-3), PC plays an important role in signal transduction as a source of lipid second messengers (1-3). In all nucleated cells, PC is made primarily through the CDP-choline pathway in which the key enzyme is CTP:phosphocholine cytidylyltransferase (CT) (2-6).Two genes that encode CT activity have been identified and characterized. CT␣ is expressed in many cells and tissues (7-13) and has a predicted structure that contains catalytic, phosphorylation, and lipid binding domains as well as a nuclear localization sequence (8, 14 -21). Recently, CT has been identified in human tissues and appears to exist as two splice variants, CT1 and CT2, differing at their C termini (22, 23). Like CT␣, CT1/2 contains catalytic and lipid binding domains. However, CT1 lacks the phosphorylation domain, and both CT1 and CT2 lack the nuclear localization sequence (23).In the last several years, studies have shown that CT can be regulated at both the transcriptional level and post-transcriptionally. CT mRNA is increased after partial hepatectomy in rats (13), after stimulation with colony-stimulating factor 1 in macrophages (24), and during development and growth (25)(26)(27)(28). It remains to be determined whether these increases in the message levels are the result of CT␣ and/or CT1/2 mRNA stability, an increase in gene transcription, or a combination of both.The murine CT␣ gene (Ctpct) was cloned and characterized by Tang and co-workers (29). The Ctpct promoter contains several putative elements for binding transcription factors, including Ap1, an overlapping site for nuclear factor-B, E2F, and Elk1, one sterol response element, as well as three elements for Sp-related factors (30). We have shown that Sp1, Sp2, and Sp3 bind competitively to three GC-rich elements and that relative promoter activity depends upon the abundance of these factors (31). We further established that transcription enhancer factor-4 can bind to an upstream regulatory element (Ϫ103/Ϫ82) and enhance the CT␣ gene expression through its interactions with the basal transcriptional machinery (32). In agreement with the finding that lipoprotein deficiency induces the expression of CT␣ mRNA and protein in alveolar type II epithelial cells (33), and our observation that the CT␣ promoter contains a putative sterol response element (30), studies by Kast et al. (34) indicate a role for cholesterol/sterol response element-binding protein and the functionality of the sterol response element in the regulation of CT␣ gene expression in Chinese hamster ovary cells and THP-1 cells. On the other hand, Lagace et al. (35) have shown that cholesterol/sterol response element-binding protein can stimulate PC biosynthe-