Abstract: | The effects of the stable prostacyclin analogue iloprost, prostaglandin E1 and prostaglandin F2 alpha on sterol synthesis were investigated in freshly isolated human mononuclear leukocytes. Incubation of cells for 6 h in a medium containing lipid-depleted serum led to a 3-fold rise in the rate of sterol synthesis from 14C]acetate or tritiated water. Iloprost and prostaglandin E1 added in increasing concentrations at zero time resulted in an inhibition of the synthesis of sterols, the suppression being 50 and 55% at a concentration of 1 mumol/1, respectively. Both prostaglandins yielded a sigmoidal log dose-effect curve. In contrast, prostaglandin F2 alpha had no influence on sterol synthesis up to a concentration of 1 mumol/1. The action of the prostacyclin analogue and prostaglandin E1 on the relative rate of sterol synthesis was not immediate, since the prostaglandins had no effect when given at 6 h to the incubation medium, and the incorporation of 14C]acetate into sterols was measured thereafter. The results suggest that prostacyclin and prostaglandin E1 affect cholesterol synthesis and therefore may play a role in the regulation of cellular cholesterol homeostasis and in the development of atherosclerosis. |