Litcius/Paper detail

Role of STAR and SCP2/SCPx in the Transport of Cholesterol and Other Lipids

Melanie Galano, Sathvika Venugopal, Vassilios Papadopoulos

2022International Journal of Molecular Sciences52 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Cholesterol is a lipid molecule essential for several key cellular processes including steroidogenesis. As such, the trafficking and distribution of cholesterol is tightly regulated by various pathways that include vesicular and non-vesicular mechanisms. One non-vesicular mechanism is the binding of cholesterol to cholesterol transport proteins, which facilitate the movement of cholesterol between cellular membranes. Classic examples of cholesterol transport proteins are the steroidogenic acute regulatory protein (STAR; STARD1), which facilitates cholesterol transport for acute steroidogenesis in mitochondria, and sterol carrier protein 2/sterol carrier protein-x (SCP2/SCPx), which are non-specific lipid transfer proteins involved in the transport and metabolism of many lipids including cholesterol between several cellular compartments. This review discusses the roles of STAR and SCP2/SCPx in cholesterol transport as model cholesterol transport proteins, as well as more recent findings that support the role of these proteins in the transport and/or metabolism of other lipids.

Topics & Concepts

CholesterolSterolPlant lipid transfer proteinsSteroidogenic acute regulatory proteinVesicular transport proteinCell biologyBiochemistryLipid metabolismTransport proteinReverse cholesterol transportBiologySterol regulatory element-binding proteinMetabolismChemistryMembraneVesicleLipoproteinMessenger RNAGeneCholesterol and Lipid MetabolismMetabolism and Genetic DisordersPeroxisome Proliferator-Activated Receptors