Literature DB >> 11729126

Adaptive regulation of bile salt transporters in kidney and liver in obstructive cholestasis in the rat.

J Lee1, F Azzaroli, L Wang, C J Soroka, A Gigliozzi, K D Setchell, W Kramer, J L Boyer.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND & AIMS: Cholestasis results in adaptive regulation of bile salt transport proteins in hepatocytes that may limit liver injury. However, it is not known if changes also occur in the expression of bile salt transporters that reside in extrahepatic tissues, particularly the kidney, which might facilitate bile salt excretion during obstructive cholestasis.
METHODS: RNA and protein were isolated from liver and kidney 14 days after common bile duct ligation in rats and assessed by RNA protection assays, Western analysis, and tissue immunofluorescence. Sodium-dependent bile salt transport was also measured in brush border membrane vesicles from the kidney.
RESULTS: After common bile duct ligation, serum bile salts initially rose and then declined to lower levels after 3 days. In contrast, urinary bile salt excretion rose progressively over the 2-week period. By that time, the ileal sodium-dependent bile salt transporter messenger RNA and protein expression in total liver had increased to 300% and 200% of controls, respectively, while falling to 46% and 37% of controls, respectively, in the kidney. Sodium-dependent uptake of (3)H-taurocholate in renal brush border membrane vesicles was decreased. In contrast, the multidrug resistance-associated protein 2 expression in the kidney was increased 2-fold, even 1 day after ligation. Immunofluorescent studies confirmed the changes in the expression of these transporters in liver and kidney.
CONCLUSIONS: These studies show that the molecular expression of bile salt transporters in the kidney and cholangiocytes undergo adaptive regulation after common bile duct obstruction in the rat. These responses may facilitate extrahepatic pathways for bile salt excretion during cholestasis.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11729126     DOI: 10.1053/gast.2001.29608

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Gastroenterology        ISSN: 0016-5085            Impact factor:   22.682


  44 in total

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4.  Renal elimination of organic anions in cholestasis.

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8.  Renal xenobiotic transporter expression is altered in multiple experimental models of nonalcoholic steatohepatitis.

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9.  Contribution of ion-pair complexation with bile salts to the transport of organic cations across LLC-PK1 cell monolayers.

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10.  ANIT-induced intrahepatic cholestasis alters hepatobiliary transporter expression via Nrf2-dependent and independent signaling.

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