Lovastatin, an inhibitor of 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A (HMG-CoA) reductase, inhibits the synthesis of mevalonic acid and is widely used as an anti-atherosclerotic drug. The macrophage scavenger receptor (SCR), a trimeric membrane glycoprotein, is postulated to play a key role in atheroma macrophage foam cell formation. HMG-CoA reductase is involved in the control of the synthesis of glycoproteins and farnesylated proteins, including ras proteins, which are involved in the transcriptional regulation of SCR gene expression. Accordingly, we examined whether lovastatin alters the gene expression of SCRs in THP-1 cell derived human macrophages. Lovastatin (5-15 mu M) caused a significant dose-related reduction in steady state levels of type-I SCR mRNA in phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA)-treated THP-1 cells. The addition of exogenous mevalonate (1 mM) completely restored the lovastatin-induced decrease of type-I SCR mRNA levels. While the addition of the isoprenoid end-product, isopentenyl adenine (50 mu M), had little effect on the type-I SCR mRNA levels in lovastatin-treated cells, the addition of isoprenoid farnesol (5 mu M) largely restored the lovastatin-induced decrease of type-I SCR mRNA levels, Actinomycin D treatment showed that degradation rates of type-I SCR mRNA did not differ between the THP-1 derived cells with and without lovastatin treatment. Nuclear run-on assays showed that lovastatin markedly decreased the transcription of SCR gene in the cells. These results suggest that lovastatin inhibits the transcription of type-I SCR gene by affecting mevalonate metabolism, possibly through the farnesyl-pyrophosphate related end-product(s) in the THP-1-derived macrophages.