Abstract

It is postulated that the six conjugated bile acids of most common occurrence in human bile could be analyzed by three enzymic and one chemical assay without any prior chromatographic separation of the bile acids. In health, all bile acids in liver or gall bladder bile are conjugated with either glycine or taurine and have an a-hydroxyl group at the 3 position. In addition, the trihydroxy bile acid, cholic (C) has a 7α- and a 12α-hydroxy group while the dihydroxy bile acids either have a second hydroxyl group at the 7α-position (chenodeoxycholic acid, CDC) or at the 12α-position (deoxycholic acid, DC). Hydroxysteroid dehydrogenases (HSDH) specific for oxido-reductase activity at the 3α-, 7α- and 12α-positions would directly quantify these 3α-, 7α- and 12α-hydroxyl groups in a sample of bile or bile extract. Subsequent data would be used to solve three simultaneous equations yielding solutions for the overall concentrations of conjugated C, conjugated CDC and conjugated DC on the assumption that the overall concentration of lithocholic acid is negligible (< 2 %). A suitable assay for the sulphonate group containing taurine conjugates, such as that described by Christie, Macdonald & Williams, 1975, along with the total bile acid measurement would readily facilitate the estimation of the glycine/taurine ( G T ) ratio. This ratio applied to the enzymatically derived estimates for conjugated DC, CDC and C would approximate the glycodeoxycholate (GDC), glycochenodeoxycholate (GCDC), glycocholate (GC), taurodeoxycholate (TDC), taurochenodeoxycholate (TCDC) and taurocholate (TC) concentrations. Figures for these concentrations would be based on the assumption that the G T ratio is approximately the same for each bile acid and that all the bile acids are conjugated.

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