Literature DB >> 24335466

The role of bile salt export pump gene repression in drug-induced cholestatic liver toxicity.

Brandy Garzel1, Hui Yang, Lei Zhang, Shiew-Mei Huang, James E Polli, Hongbing Wang.   

Abstract

The bile salt export pump (BSEP, ABCB11) is predominantly responsible for the efflux of bile salts, and disruption of BSEP function is often associated with altered hepatic homeostasis of bile acids and cholestatic liver injury. Accumulating evidence suggests that many drugs can cause cholestasis through interaction with hepatic transporters. To date, a relatively strong association between drug-induced cholestasis and attenuated BSEP activity has been proposed. However, whether repression of BSEP transcription would contribute to drug-induced cholestasis is largely unknown. In this study, we selected 30 drugs previously reported as BSEP inhibitors to evaluate their effects on BSEP expression, farnesoid X receptor (FXR) activation, and correlations to clinically reported liver toxicity. Our results indicate that of the 30 BSEP inhibitors, five exhibited potent repression of BSEP expression (≥60% repression), ten were moderate repressors (20-60% repression), whereas others had negligible effects (≤20% repression). Of importance, two drugs (troglitazone and benzbromarone), previously withdrawn from the market because of liver injury, are among the potent repressors. Further investigation of the five potent repressors revealed that transcriptional repression of BSEP by lopinavir and troglitazone may occur through their interaction with FXR, whereas others are via FXR-independent yet unidentified pathways. Our data suggest that in addition to functional inhibition, repression of BSEP expression may play an important role in drug-induced cholestatic liver toxicity. Thus, a combination of the two would reveal a more accurate prediction of drug-induced cholestasis than does either repression or inhibition alone.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 24335466      PMCID: PMC3935137          DOI: 10.1124/dmd.113.054189

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Drug Metab Dispos        ISSN: 0090-9556            Impact factor:   3.922


  29 in total

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4.  Metformin Disrupts Bile Acid Efflux by Repressing Bile Salt Export Pump Expression.

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5.  Omics-based responses induced by bosentan in human hepatoma HepaRG cell cultures.

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Review 10.  Update on FXR Biology: Promising Therapeutic Target?

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