Macrophage ABCA1 effluxes lipid and has anti-inflammatory activity. The syntrophins, which are cytoplasmic PDZ protein scaffolding factors, can bind ABCA1 and modulate its activity. However, many of the data assessing the function of the ABCA1-syntrophin interaction are based on overexpression in nonmacrophage cells. To assess endogenous complex function in macrophages, we derived immortalized macrophages from Abca1(+/+) and Abca1(-/-) mice and show their phenotype recapitulates primary macrophages. Abca1(+/+) lines express the CD11B and F4/80 macrophage markers and markedly upregulate cholesterol efflux in response to LXR nuclear hormone agonists. In contrast, immortalized Abca1(-/-) macrophages show no efflux to apoA-I. In response to LPS, Abca1(-/-) macrophages display pro-inflammatory changes, including an increased level of expression of cell surface CD14, and 11-26-fold higher levels of IL-6 and IL-12 mRNA. Given recapitulation of phenotype, we show with these lines that the ABCA1-syntrophin protein complex is upregulated by LXR agonists and can bind apoA-I. Moreover, in immortalized macrophages, combined α1/β2-syntrophin loss modulated ABCA1 cell surface levels and induced pro-inflammatory gene expression. However, loss of all three syntrophin isoforms known to bind ABCA1 did not impair lipid efflux in immortalized or primary macrophages. Thus, the ABCA1-syntrophin protein complex is not essential for ABCA1 macrophage lipid efflux but does directly interact with apoA-I and can modulate the pool of cell surface ABCA1 stabilized by apoA-I.