Literature DB >> 9425937

Enhanced Na+-dependent bile salt uptake by WIF-B cells, a rat hepatoma hybrid cell line, following growth in the presence of a physiological bile salt.

E M Konieczko1, A K Ralston, A R Crawford, S J Karpen, J M Crawford.   

Abstract

Although bile salts are toxic to the liver at high plasma concentrations, the effects of physiological concentrations of bile salts on normal hepatic function are poorly understood. We examined the effect of taurocholate (TC) on the basolateral uptake of [3H]TC in WIF-B cells, a hybrid cell line stably exhibiting in vitro the structural and functional polarity of hepatocytes. Cells were grown in the absence or presence of TC (50 micromol/L) over 12 days, and then incubated with [3H]TC concentrations ranging from 1 to 250 micromol/L. For both control and TC-grown cells, uptake of [3H]TC was linear over 2 minutes. In control cells, the Km for [3H]TC Na+-dependent uptake over 1 minute was 6 +/- 5 micromol/L, and the Vmax was 45 +/- 6 pmol TC/mg protein/min (+/- SEM). TC-grown cells exhibited no significant change in Km but showed a doubling of Vmax to 87 +/- 6 pmol TC/mg protein/min (P < .005). In both control and TC-grown cells, maximal uptake of [3H]TC occurred following 10 to 12 days in culture, with TC-grown cells consistently showing greater rates of [3H]TC uptake from 4 to 14 days in culture. Western blots immunostained for the basolateral Na+-dependent plasma membrane protein, ntcp, revealed the appropriate approximately 50-kd band in control and TC-grown cells, and confocal immunofluorescence microscopy demonstrated staining along the basolateral plasma membrane. Northern blots hybridized with a cDNA probe directed against ntcp indicated a modest TC-induced increase in mRNA levels. Reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) using RNA isolated from WIF-B cells and oligonucleotide primers specific for rat ntcp or human NTCP transcripts revealed only the presence of the rat ntcp transcript. We conclude that bile salts, at concentrations normally found in mammalian portal blood, may be capable of promoting enhanced hepatocellular bile salt uptake via an increase in basolateral Na+-dependent plasma membrane transport capacity.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9425937     DOI: 10.1002/hep.510270130

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Hepatology        ISSN: 0270-9139            Impact factor:   17.425


  4 in total

1.  Bile acids alter the subcellular localization of CNT2 (concentrative nucleoside cotransporter) and increase CNT2-related transport activity in liver parenchymal cells.

Authors:  Sonia Fernández-Veledo; Isabel Huber-Ruano; Ivette Aymerich; Sylvie Duflot; F Javier Casado; Marçal Pastor-Anglada
Journal:  Biochem J       Date:  2006-04-15       Impact factor: 3.857

2.  Interaction of the hereditary hemochromatosis protein HFE with transferrin receptor 2 is required for transferrin-induced hepcidin expression.

Authors:  Junwei Gao; Juxing Chen; Maxwell Kramer; Hidekazu Tsukamoto; An-Sheng Zhang; Caroline A Enns
Journal:  Cell Metab       Date:  2009-03       Impact factor: 27.287

3.  Differential modulation of cellular death and survival pathways by conjugated bile acids.

Authors:  E C Torchia; A Stolz; L B Agellon
Journal:  BMC Biochem       Date:  2001-10-15       Impact factor: 4.059

4.  Expression and subcellular localization of aquaporin water channels in the polarized hepatocyte cell line, WIF-B.

Authors:  Sergio A Gradilone; Pamela S Tietz; Patrick L Splinter; Raúl A Marinelli; Nicholas F LaRusso
Journal:  BMC Physiol       Date:  2005-08-18
  4 in total

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