Abstract
In the past ten years, our understanding of the importance of bile acids has expanded from fat absorption and glucose/lipid/energy homeostasis into potential therapeutic targets for amelioration of chronic cholestatic liver diseases. The discovery of important bile acid signaling mechanisms, as well as their role in metabolism, has increased the interest in bile acid/bile acid receptor research development. Bile acid levels and speciation are dysregulated during liver injury/damage resulting in cytotoxicity, inflammation, and fibrosis. An increasing focus to target bile acid receptors, responsible for bile acid synthesis and circulation, such as Farnesoid X receptor and apical sodium-dependent bile acid transporter to reduce bile acid synthesis have resulted in clinical trials for treatment of previously untreatable chronic liver diseases such as non-alcoholic steatohepatitis and primary sclerosing cholangitis. This review focuses on current bile acid receptor mediators and their effects on parenchymal and non-parenchymal cells. Attention will also be brought to the gut/liver axis during chronic liver damage and its treatment with bile acid receptor modulators. Overall, these studies lend evidence to the importance of bile acids and their receptors on liver disease establishment and progression.
Highlights
Bile Acid Receptor Therapeutics Effects on Chronic Liver DiseasesVik Meadows 1,2, Lindsey Kennedy 3, Debjyoti Kundu 2, Gianfranco Alpini 1,3 and Heather Francis 1,3*
Focal studies of hepatic secretion led to the critical analysis and understanding of bile and its circulation connecting the liver and intestine [1]
In the Farnesoid X Receptor Ligand Obeticholic Acid in non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) Treatment (FLINT) clinical trial, NASH patients treated with Obeticholic acid (OCA) presented with improved fibrosis scores, elevated low-density lipoprotein (LDL) and increased average weight loss compared to placebo control [46, 70]
Summary
Vik Meadows 1,2, Lindsey Kennedy 3, Debjyoti Kundu 2, Gianfranco Alpini 1,3 and Heather Francis 1,3*. Specialty section: This article was submitted to Gastroenterology, a section of the journal
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