Abstract

AimAtorvastatin is a HMG-CoA reductase inhibitor used for hyperlipidemia. Atorvastatin is generally safe but may induce cholestasis. The present study aimed to examine the effects of atorvastatin on hepatic gene expression related to bile acid metabolism and homeostasis, as well as the expression of circadian clock genes in livers of mice.MethodsAdult male mice were given atorvastatin (10, 30, and 100 mg/kg, po) daily for 30 days, and blood biochemistry, histopathology, and gene expression were examined.ResultsRepeated administration of atorvastatin did not affect animal body weight gain or liver weights. Serum enzyme activities were in the normal range. Histologically, the high dose of atorvastatin produced scattered swollen hepatocytes, foci of feathery-like degeneration, together with increased expression of Egr-1 and metallothionein-1. Atorvastatin increased the expression of Cyp7a1 in the liver, along with FXR and SHP. In contract, atorvastatin decreased the expression of bile acid transporters Ntcp, Bsep, Ostα, and Ostβ. The most dramatic change was the 30-fold induction of Cyp7a1. Because Cyp7a1 is a circadian clock-controlled gene, we further examined the effect of atorvastatin on clock gene expression. Atorvastatin increased the expression of clock core master genes Bmal1 and Npas2, decreased the expression of clock feedback genes Per2, Per3, and the clock targeted genes Dbp and Tef, whereas it had no effect on Cry1 and Nr1d1 expression.ConclusionRepeated administration of atorvastatin affects bile acid metabolism and markedly increases the expression of the bile acid synthesis rate-limiting enzyme gene Cyp7a1, together with alterations in the expression of circadian clock genes.

Highlights

  • Statins are the primary drugs clinically used to treat hyperlipidemia (Grover, Luthra & Maroo, 2014; Kalantari & Naghipour, 2014)

  • The results demonstrate that atorvastatin affects bile acid homeostasis, producing about 30-fold induction of Cyp7a1, and this effect is associated with dysregulation of circadian clock genes

  • The present study showed that repeated administration of high doses of atorvastatin did not alter animal body weight gain, liver weight, serum ALT, or cause overt pathological alterations except for foci of inflammation, suggesting that atorvastatin is generally safe

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Summary

Introduction

Statins are the primary drugs clinically used to treat hyperlipidemia (Grover, Luthra & Maroo, 2014; Kalantari & Naghipour, 2014). Statins are generally safe in clinical use (Kalantari & Naghipour, 2014), but there are few adverse drug reaction reports that are associated with statins, such as hepatotoxicity (Bjornsson, Jacobsen & Kalaitzakis, 2012; Bjornsson, 2015; Grover, Luthra & Maroo, 2014; Kalantari & Naghipour, 2014). Cholestasis is one of major adverse effects in statin-induced liver injury. It has been shown that the early growth response protein-1 (Egr-1) signal pathway and metallothionein-1 (MT-1) are involved in acute intrahepatic cholesteric liver injury (Allen, Jaeschke & Copple, 2011; Alscher et al, 2002; Ding et al, 2008; Sullivan et al, 2012)

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