Recent findings suggest that StAR may also traffic cholesterol to a second mitochondrial enzyme,
sterol 27-hydroxylase. This enzyme converts cholesterol to 27-hydroxycholesterol. In this way it may be important for the first step in one of the two pathways for the production of
bile acids by the
liver (the alternative pathway). Evidence also shows that the presence of StAR in a type of
immune cell, the
macrophage, where it can stimulate the production of 27-hydroxycholesterol. In this case, 27-hydroxycholesterol may by itself be helpful against the production of
inflammatory factors associated with
cardiovascular disease. No study has yet found a link between the loss of StAR and problems in bile acid production or increased risk for cardiovascular disease. Recently StAR was found to be expressed in cardiac fibroblasts in response to ischemic injury due to myocardial infarction. In these cells it has no apparent de novo steroidogenic activity, as evidenced by the lack of the key steroidogenic enzymes cytochrome P450 side chain cleavage (CYP11A1) and 3 beta hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (3βHSD). StAR was found to have an anti-apoptotic effect on the fibroblasts, which may allow them to survive the initial stress of the infarct, differentiate and function in tissue repair at the infarction site. ==History==