| Literature DB >> 3718477 |
K Rahman, T G Hammond, P J Lowe, S G Barnwell, B Clark, R Coleman.
Abstract
A major determinant of biliary lipid secretion is bile-salt secretion. Taurocholate (TC), a micelle-forming bile salt, was infused continuously at different rates in both isolated perfused livers and biliary-fistula rats. In both of these systems, infusion of TC brought about an elevated secretion of phosphatidylcholine for the duration of the TC infusion period. Initial phospholipid/bile-salt ratios in the bile were higher in the whole-animal model than in isolated livers, but at the higher infusion rates both secreted approx. 6 mol of phospholipid for every 100 mol of bile salt. The secretion of phospholipid, which was maintained even at high rates of bile-salt infusion, suggest a continuous and regulated phospholipid supply and secretion mechanism. In contrast, however, multiple short pulses of TC to the perfused liver, which brought about relatively equal biliary bile-salt output pulses, did not bring about equal phospholipid outputs, since the phospholipid peak size declined with each bile-salt pulse. These experiments taken together suggest either that a threshold (intracellular) bile-salt concentration may be required to 'switch-on' the phospholipid supply and that it may need to be maintained for continuous biliary phospholipid supply to the canalicular membrane.Entities:
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Year: 1986 PMID: 3718477 PMCID: PMC1146581 DOI: 10.1042/bj2340421
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biochem J ISSN: 0264-6021 Impact factor: 3.857