Regulation of HMG-CoA reductase synthesis by cholesterol is mediated by an elegant system of transcriptional regulation of the HMG-CoA gene. This gene, along with more than 20 other genes encoding enzymes that mediate the uptake and synthesis of cholesterol and unsaturated fatty acids, is controlled by a small family of proteins called sterol regulatory element-binding proteins (SREBPs). How?
A.
When newly synthesized, these proteins are embedded in the ER. Only the soluble regulatory domain fragment of an SREBP functions as a transcription activator. When cholesterol and oxysterol levels are high, SREBPs are held in the ER in a complex with another protein called SREBP cleavage-activating protein (SCAP), which in turn is anchored in the ER membrane by its interaction with a third membrane protein, Insig (insulin-induced gene protein).
B.
SCAP and Insig act as sterol sensors. When sterol levels are high, the Insig-SCAP-SREBP complex is retained in the ER membrane. When the level of sterols in the cell declines, the SCAP-SREBP complex is escorted by secretory proteins to the Golgi complex.
C.
There, two proteolytic cleavages of SREBP release a regulatory fragment, which enters the nucleus and activates transcription of its target genes, including those for HMG-CoA reductase, the LDL receptor protein, and other proteins needed for lipid synthesis.
D.
When sterol levels increase sufficiently, the proteolytic release of SREBP amino-terminal domains is again blocked, and proteasome degradation of the existing active domains results in rapid shutdown of the gene targets.