| Literature DB >> 17622954 |
Beth A Carter1, Olga A Taylor, Daniel R Prendergast, Tracy L Zimmerman, Richard Von Furstenberg, David D Moore, Saul J Karpen.
Abstract
Phytosterols, components of soy-derived lipids, are among the proposed exacerbants of parenteral nutrition-associated cholestasis (PNAC). We investigated whether phytosterols contribute to bile acid (BA)-induced hepatocyte damage by antagonizing a nuclear receptor (NR) critically involved in hepatoprotection from cholestasis, FXR (farnesoid X receptor, NR1H4). In HepG2 cells, stigmasterol acetate (StigAc), a water-soluble Stig derivative, suppressed ligand-activated expression of FXR target genes involved in adaptation to cholestasis (i.e. BSEP, FGF-19, OSTalpha/beta). Furthermore, StigAc antagonized BA-activated, FXR target genes SHP and BSEP in FXR+/+, but not in FXR-/- mouse hepatocytes. Both Stig and StigAc inhibited BA-activated, FXR-dependent reporter gene expression in transfected HepG2 cells, whereas the most prevalent phytosterol in lipids, beta-sitosterol, had no inhibitory effect. Finally, among six ligand-activated NR-ligand binding domains (LBDs) tested, antagonism by StigAc was specific to only two (FXR and PXR, pregnane X receptor, NR1I2). We demonstrate that Stig, a phytosterol prevalent in soy-derived PN lipid solutions, is a potent in vitro antagonist of the NR for bile acids FXR.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2007 PMID: 17622954 DOI: 10.1203/PDR.0b013e3181256492
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pediatr Res ISSN: 0031-3998 Impact factor: 3.756