| Literature DB >> 30387017 |
Jean-Pierre Raufman1, Melissa Metry2, Jessica Felton3, Kunrong Cheng4, Su Xu5, James Polli2.
Abstract
In up to 50% of people diagnosed with a common ailment, diarrhea-predominant irritable bowel syndrome, diarrhea results from excess spillage of bile acids into the colon-data emerging over the past decade identified deficient release of a gut hormone, fibroblast growth factor 19 (FGF19), and a consequent lack of feedback suppression of bile acid synthesis as the most common cause. 75Selenium homotaurocholic acid (SeHCAT) testing, considered the most sensitive and specific means of identifying individuals with bile acid diarrhea, is unavailable in many countries, including the United States. Other than SeHCAT, tests to diagnose bile acid diarrhea are cumbersome, non-specific, or insufficiently validated; clinicians commonly rely on a therapeutic trial of bile acid binders. Here, we review bile acid synthesis and transport, the pathogenesis of bile acid diarrhea, the reasons clinicians frequently overlook this disorder, including the limitations of currently available tests, and our efforts to develop a novel 19F magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)-based diagnostic approach. We created 19F-labeled bile acid analogues whose in vitro and in vivo transport mimics that of naturally occurring bile acids. Using dual 1H/19F MRI of the gallbladders of live mice fed 19F-labeled bile acid analogues, we were able to differentiate wild-type mice from strains deficient in intestinal expression of a key bile acid transporter, the apical sodium-dependent bile acid transporter (ASBT), or FGF15, the mouse homologue of FGF19. In addition to reviewing our development of 19F-labeled bile acid analogue-MRI to diagnose bile acid diarrhea, we discuss challenges to its clinical implementation. A major limitation is the paucity of clinical MRI facilities equipped with the appropriate coil and software needed to detect 19F signals.Entities:
Keywords: 19F MRI; Bile acids; Diarrhea; Enterohepatic circulation; Gallbladder; Irritable bowel syndrome
Mesh:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30387017 PMCID: PMC6408933 DOI: 10.1007/s10334-018-0713-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: MAGMA ISSN: 0968-5243 Impact factor: 2.310
Fig. 1Enterohepatic circulation of bile acids. Black arrows trace the route of bile acids through the enterohepatic circulation, a highly efficient process that recovers > 95% of enteric bile acids for reprocessing (conjugation) and re-excretion by hepatocytes in the liver. Hepatocytes synthesize and excrete bile acids, byproducts of cholesterol metabolism, along with recycled, conjugated bile acids, into the bile ducts for storage in the gallbladder. Eating stimulates gallbladder contraction and bile acid release into the duodenum where they play a major role in fat digestion and absorption. In the ileum, ASBT actively transports bile acids into enterocytes where, via activation of nuclear FXR, bile acids stimulate FGF19 production and release into the portal venous circulation. The dashed arrows depict passive transport of bile acids from the intestines into the portal circulation. In hepatocytes, bile acid interaction with nuclear FXR and FGF19 interaction with the plasma membrane FGFR4 receptor complex repress Cyp7A1; feedback inhibition of bile acid synthesis. During transit through the gastrointestinal tract, native and modified bile acids are exposed to gastric acid, pancreatic and intestinal mucosal enzymes, and enteric bacteria. ASBT apical sodium-dependent bile acid transporter, FGF19 fibroblast growth factor-19, FGFR4 fibroblast growth factor receptor-4, FXR farnesoid X receptor, GB gallbladder, OST organic solute transporter, RXR retinoid X receptor, SHP small heterodimer partner
Current tests to diagnose bile acid diarrhea
| Test | Brief description of methods | Disadvantages | Sensitivity/specificity; references [ |
|---|---|---|---|
| 72SeHCAT retention | Methods and interpretation vary. Commonly, subjects ingest 72SeHCAT and undergo a gamma camera body scan immediately and again 7 days later. At 7 days, normal subjects retain ≥ 15% of the initial 72SeHCAT signal | Not available in many countries (not FDA-approved in the US). Rapid intestinal transit may result in false positives | 89%/100%; considered ‘gold standard’ when available |
| Fecal bile acid levels | Methods and interpretation vary. Subjects collect stool for 48–72 h while ingesting at least 100 g/day dietary fat. Fecal bile acid levels > 2 mmol/24 h are considered elevated | Cumbersome. Technically difficult. Not commercially available | Unknown |
| Serum FGF19 | Blood draw after overnight fast | Requires research lab: not commercially available. Insufficiently validated | 58%/84% |
| Plasma C4 | Blood draw after overnight fast | Requires research lab. Results altered in liver disease or with some medicines. Insufficiently validated | 90%/79% |
| Trial of bile acid binder | Gage therapeutic response to 2- to 4-week treatment with colestipol, cholestyramine, or colesevalam | Interference with drug absorption. Bloating, flatulence, abdominal pain, and constipation | Unknown |
Fig. 2Chemical structures of 19F-labeled bile acid analogues. a CA-lys-TFA, a trifluoroacetyl l-lysine conjugate of cholic acid, forms a secondary amine at the C-24 region with the amino acid lysine that links the three equivalent 19F atoms to cholic acid. b CA-sar-TFMA, a trifluoro-N-methyl-acetamide conjugate of cholic acid, forms a more stable tertiary amine with the amino acid sarcosine at the C-24 region that links the three equivalent 19F atoms to cholic acid
Fig. 3In vivo and ex vivo anatomical and in vivo 1H MRI images of the mouse gallbladder. a Exposed mouse gallbladder after abdominal incision. The yellow dotted line indicates the bile-filled fasting gallbladder; the dashed arrows indicate the clamped common bile duct. b Excised intact gallbladder with the common bile duct clamped. The ruler is marked in millimeters (mm). c High-resolution proton density-weighted MRI image of the fasting murine gallbladder (yellow dotted line)
Fig. 4Magnetic resonance imaging of 19F-labled bile acid analogs in wild-type mice, and mice with knockout of a key bile acid transporter, ASBT, or of FGF15, the mouse homologue of FGF19. a Representative MR images from mice gavaged with either 150 mg/kg CA-lys-TFA (top) or CA-sar-TFMA (bottom). We used CA-lys-TFA- and CA-sar-TFMA-containing phantoms (arrowheads) adjacent to the mice to extrapolate the compound concentrations within the gallbladders (24 mM CA-lys-TFA; 34.2 mM CA-sar-TFMA). The left panels show 1H MR images of mouse abdominal cross-sectional anatomy with the gallbladders indicated by arrows. Middle panels show 19F MR images obtained from the same cross-sectional area. Right panels show merged images 1H and 19F MR images. b Representative MR images from mice deficient in ASBT (Slc10a2−; top) and FGF15 (Fgf15−; bottom) after gavage with 150 mg/kg CA-lys-TFA. Whereas the CA-lys-TFA phantoms provide 19F signals (arrows), 19F signals are not detected emanating from the gallbladders of either knockout mouse
Increased fecal bile acid levels in ASBT- and FGF15-deficient mice
| Mouse model | Fecal bile acids | References | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| WT mice (µmol/day/100 g bw) | Knockout mice (µmol/day/100 g bw) | Fold-increase (KO/WT) | ||
| Asbt− | Males: ~ 6a | ~ 138a | 24 | [ |
| Females: ~ 9a | ~ 98a | 11 | ||
| 23.3 ± 2.1 | 110.0 ± 10.6 | 4.7 | [ | |
| Fgf15−/− | ~ 17.5a | ~ 35.0a | ~ 2 | [ |
| 15.24 ± 1.00 | 34.45 ± 3.52 | 2.26 ± 0.28 | [ | |
WT wild-type, bw body weight, KO knockout
aNumbers derived from bar graphs in the referenced publications