Literature DB >> 33013271

Highlight report: New insights in liver physiology: Canalicular bile flux is diffusion dominated.

Ahmed Ezzat Ahmed1.   

Abstract

Entities:  

Year:  2020        PMID: 33013271      PMCID: PMC7527507          DOI: 10.17179/excli2020-2836

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  EXCLI J        ISSN: 1611-2156            Impact factor:   4.068


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In the current issue of Hepatology a novel concept has been published how the liver transports bile through canaliculi and ducts to the intestine (Vartak et al., 2020[20]). Hepatocytes are known to excrete bile acids and xenobiotics into a 'canal system' that finally drains into the intestine (Godoy et al., 2013[9]). The most upstream part of this canal system, the bile canaliculi, are lined by the membrane of hepatocytes. With only 0.5-2 µm diameter, bile canaliculi represent very thin vessels. They are connected to interlobular bile ducts by a connecting pipe, the so-called Hering channel (Vartak et al., 2016[19]). In contrast to bile canaliculi, the bile ducts are lined by epithelial cells, the cholangiocytes. In the present study, the authors show that it is important to differentiate bile canaliculi and bile ducts as functionally distinct domains (Vartak et al., 2020[20]): transport of small molecules in the bile canaliculi is diffusion dominated and only in the ducts diffusion is augmented by flow due to water influx (Vartak et al., 2020[20]). According to this model, bile canaliculi can be compared to a lake with standing water that is connected to a river, the bile duct. When a compound is given into the lake, it will also reach the river - by diffusion - and will only then be carried away by flow. This new model (Vartak et al., 2020[20]) contradicts the prevailing osmotic model of bile flow that is present in medical text books since decades (Boyer, 2013[2]; Boyer and Bloomer, 1974[3]; Boyer et al., 1970[4]; Layden et al., 1978[14]; Sperber, 1959[18]; Wheeler and Ramos, 1960[21]; Wheeler et al., 1968[22]; Wood et al., 1977[23]). According to the osmotic model, bile acids are excreted by hepatocytes into the bile canaliculi. Bile acids are osmotically active and draw water into the canalicular lumen. Since bile canaliculi are closed at their pericentral end, bile should flow to the open side into the ducts. However, bile flow in canaliculi has never been measured. Because of the small canalicular diameter flow analysis cannot be accomplished by conventional methods. Vartak and colleagues now established a method that allows the quantification of flow and diffusion in bile canaliculi and ducts in intact livers of living mice (Vartak et al., 2020[20]). For this purpose, they used a photoactivatable compound, CMNB-fluorescein, which only upon UV irradiation releases fluorescein that then can be detected. Importantly, CMNB-fluorescein is excreted into bile canaliculi. Using an intravital method, Vartak and colleagues photoactivated CMNB-fluorescein in small tissue regions of intact livers, simultaneously imaging the fluorescence generated in the UV exposed region. The result was unexpected, since the fluorescent material photoactivated in a small region of the canalicular network, spread symmetrically into the surrounding canaliculi, which indicates diffusion rather than flow. In contrast, when photoactivation was performed in a blood vessel, the photoactivated material rapidly moved unidirectionally with the blood flow. A particularly convincing set of data was obtained, when the authors photoactivated CMNB-fluorescein within a Hering channel. As expected, fluorescent material moved downstream into the bile duct; however, unexpectedly also travelled retrograde, upstream into the canalicular network. This retrograde flux would not be possible in a flow dominated system. In their previous work, the authors studied liver physiology based on mathematical models (Hoehme et al., 2010[11]; Schliess et al., 2014[17]; Bartl et al., 2015[1]; Schenk et al., 2017[16]; Ghallab et al., 2016[7]) and elucidated the microarchitecture of the biliary tract by imaging and 3D reconstruction (Hammad et al., 2014[10]; Damle-Vartak et al., 2019[5]; Friebel et al., 2015[6]). However, later they began to focus on intravital imaging of physiological processes (Reif et al., 2017[15]; Ghallab et al., 2019[8]; Köppert et al., 2018[13]). The present study demonstrates the importance of analyzing physiological parameters in intact organs in vivo, because it may be misleading to exclusively rely on model simulations. The findings of Vartak and colleagues overturn long-standing assumptions about how the liver excretes bile into the duodenum. The seemingly subtle difference between flow and diffusion becomes relevant, when it comes to identification of adequate therapeutic strategies for liver diseases, such as non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD). In some cholestatic liver diseases the bile canalicular network shows alterations, such as limited connectivity to the ducts (Vartak et al., 2016[19]; Jansen et al., 2017[12]). If the same volume of liquid would have to pass the compromised canaliculi by advection, this should result in a build-up of pressure, which could damage liver tissue. Therefore, drugs should be identified that reduce the assumed flow, which would also prevent the increase of damaging pressure. However, based on the present results (Vartak et al., 2020[20]), this flow-pressure concept should be questioned. It will be interesting to observe the further discussion about the correct model of bile flux and its pathophysiological as well as clinical consequences.

Conflict of interest

The author declares that he has no conflict of interest.
  23 in total

1.  Prediction and validation of cell alignment along microvessels as order principle to restore tissue architecture in liver regeneration.

Authors:  Stefan Hoehme; Marc Brulport; Alexander Bauer; Essam Bedawy; Wiebke Schormann; Matthias Hermes; Verena Puppe; Rolf Gebhardt; Sebastian Zellmer; Michael Schwarz; Ernesto Bockamp; Tobias Timmel; Jan G Hengstler; Dirk Drasdo
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2010-05-19       Impact factor: 11.205

2.  Optimality in the zonation of ammonia detoxification in rodent liver.

Authors:  Martin Bartl; Michael Pfaff; Ahmed Ghallab; Dominik Driesch; Sebastian G Henkel; Jan G Hengstler; Stefan Schuster; Christoph Kaleta; Rolf Gebhardt; Sebastian Zellmer; Pu Li
Journal:  Arch Toxicol       Date:  2015-10-05       Impact factor: 5.153

3.  Canalicular bile production in dogs.

Authors:  H O Wheeler; E D Ross; S E Bradley
Journal:  Am J Physiol       Date:  1968-04

4.  Integrated metabolic spatial-temporal model for the prediction of ammonia detoxification during liver damage and regeneration.

Authors:  Freimut Schliess; Stefan Hoehme; Sebastian G Henkel; Ahmed Ghallab; Dominik Driesch; Jan Böttger; Reinhard Guthke; Michael Pfaff; Jan G Hengstler; Rolf Gebhardt; Dieter Häussinger; Dirk Drasdo; Sebastian Zellmer
Journal:  Hepatology       Date:  2014-05-12       Impact factor: 17.425

5.  Pipe-3D: A Pipeline Based on Immunofluorescence, 3D Confocal Imaging, Reconstructions, and Morphometry for Biliary Network Analysis in Cholestasis.

Authors:  Amruta Damle-Vartak; Brigitte Begher-Tibbe; Georgia Gunther; Fabian Geisler; Nachiket Vartak; Jan G Hengstler
Journal:  Methods Mol Biol       Date:  2019

6.  Evaluation of a new monkey model for the repeated study of bile secretory physiology.

Authors:  R A Wood; A L Baker; A W Hall; J L Boyer; A R Moossa
Journal:  Ann Surg       Date:  1977-03       Impact factor: 12.969

7.  The effect of sodium taurocholate on the hepatic metabolism of sulfobromophthalein sodium (BSP). The role of bile flow.

Authors:  J L Boyer; R L Scheig; G Klatskin
Journal:  J Clin Invest       Date:  1970-02       Impact factor: 14.808

Review 8.  Recent advances in 2D and 3D in vitro systems using primary hepatocytes, alternative hepatocyte sources and non-parenchymal liver cells and their use in investigating mechanisms of hepatotoxicity, cell signaling and ADME.

Authors:  Patricio Godoy; Nicola J Hewitt; Ute Albrecht; Melvin E Andersen; Nariman Ansari; Sudin Bhattacharya; Johannes Georg Bode; Jennifer Bolleyn; Christoph Borner; Jan Böttger; Albert Braeuning; Robert A Budinsky; Britta Burkhardt; Neil R Cameron; Giovanni Camussi; Chong-Su Cho; Yun-Jaie Choi; J Craig Rowlands; Uta Dahmen; Georg Damm; Olaf Dirsch; María Teresa Donato; Jian Dong; Steven Dooley; Dirk Drasdo; Rowena Eakins; Karine Sá Ferreira; Valentina Fonsato; Joanna Fraczek; Rolf Gebhardt; Andrew Gibson; Matthias Glanemann; Chris E P Goldring; María José Gómez-Lechón; Geny M M Groothuis; Lena Gustavsson; Christelle Guyot; David Hallifax; Seddik Hammad; Adam Hayward; Dieter Häussinger; Claus Hellerbrand; Philip Hewitt; Stefan Hoehme; Hermann-Georg Holzhütter; J Brian Houston; Jens Hrach; Kiyomi Ito; Hartmut Jaeschke; Verena Keitel; Jens M Kelm; B Kevin Park; Claus Kordes; Gerd A Kullak-Ublick; Edward L LeCluyse; Peng Lu; Jennifer Luebke-Wheeler; Anna Lutz; Daniel J Maltman; Madlen Matz-Soja; Patrick McMullen; Irmgard Merfort; Simon Messner; Christoph Meyer; Jessica Mwinyi; Dean J Naisbitt; Andreas K Nussler; Peter Olinga; Francesco Pampaloni; Jingbo Pi; Linda Pluta; Stefan A Przyborski; Anup Ramachandran; Vera Rogiers; Cliff Rowe; Celine Schelcher; Kathrin Schmich; Michael Schwarz; Bijay Singh; Ernst H K Stelzer; Bruno Stieger; Regina Stöber; Yuichi Sugiyama; Ciro Tetta; Wolfgang E Thasler; Tamara Vanhaecke; Mathieu Vinken; Thomas S Weiss; Agata Widera; Courtney G Woods; Jinghai James Xu; Kathy M Yarborough; Jan G Hengstler
Journal:  Arch Toxicol       Date:  2013-08-23       Impact factor: 5.153

9.  In vivo imaging of systemic transport and elimination of xenobiotics and endogenous molecules in mice.

Authors:  Raymond Reif; Ahmed Ghallab; Lynette Beattie; Georgia Günther; Lars Kuepfer; Paul M Kaye; Jan G Hengstler
Journal:  Arch Toxicol       Date:  2016-12-20       Impact factor: 5.153

10.  Bile Microinfarcts in Cholestasis Are Initiated by Rupture of the Apical Hepatocyte Membrane and Cause Shunting of Bile to Sinusoidal Blood.

Authors:  Ahmed Ghallab; Ute Hofmann; Selahaddin Sezgin; Nachiket Vartak; Reham Hassan; Ayham Zaza; Patricio Godoy; Kai Markus Schneider; Georgia Guenther; Yasser A Ahmed; Aya A Abbas; Verena Keitel; Lars Kuepfer; Steven Dooley; Frank Lammert; Christian Trautwein; Michael Spiteller; Dirk Drasdo; Alan F Hofmann; Peter L M Jansen; Jan G Hengstler; Raymond Reif
Journal:  Hepatology       Date:  2018-11-19       Impact factor: 17.425

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