Abstract

Key points Acute biliary pancreatitis is a sudden and severe condition initiated by bile reflux into the pancreas.Bile acids are known to induce Ca2+ signals and necrosis in isolated pancreatic acinar cells but the effects of bile acids on stellate cells are unexplored.Here we show that cholate and taurocholate elicit more dramatic Ca2+ signals and necrosis in stellate cells compared to the adjacent acinar cells in pancreatic lobules; whereas taurolithocholic acid 3‐sulfate primarily affects acinar cells.Ca2+ signals and necrosis are strongly dependent on extracellular Ca2+ as well as Na+; and Na+‐dependent transport plays an important role in the overall bile acid uptake in pancreatic stellate cells.Bile acid‐mediated pancreatic damage can be further escalated by bradykinin‐induced signals in stellate cells and thus killing of stellate cells by bile acids might have important implications in acute biliary pancreatitis. Acute biliary pancreatitis, caused by bile reflux into the pancreas, is a serious condition characterised by premature activation of digestive enzymes within acinar cells, followed by necrosis and inflammation. Bile acids are known to induce pathological Ca2+ signals and necrosis in acinar cells. However, bile acid‐elicited signalling events in stellate cells remain unexplored. This is the first study to demonstrate the pathophysiological effects of bile acids on stellate cells in two experimental models: ex vivo (mouse pancreatic lobules) and in vitro (human cells). Sodium cholate and taurocholate induced cytosolic Ca2+ elevations in stellate cells, larger than those elicited simultaneously in the neighbouring acinar cells. In contrast, taurolithocholic acid 3‐sulfate (TLC‐S), known to induce Ca2+ oscillations in acinar cells, had only minor effects on stellate cells in lobules. The dependence of the Ca2+ signals on extracellular Na+ and the presence of sodium–taurocholate cotransporting polypeptide (NTCP) indicate a Na+‐dependent bile acid uptake mechanism in stellate cells. Bile acid treatment caused necrosis predominantly in stellate cells, which was abolished by removal of extracellular Ca2+ and significantly reduced in the absence of Na+, showing that bile‐dependent cell death was a downstream event of Ca2+ signals. Finally, combined application of TLC‐S and the inflammatory mediator bradykinin caused more extensive necrosis in both stellate and acinar cells than TLC‐S alone. Our findings shed new light on the mechanism by which bile acids promote pancreatic pathology. This involves not only signalling in acinar cells but also in stellate cells.

Highlights

  • Acute pancreatitis (AP) is a potentially severe disease with an overall mortality up to 6% (de Beaux et al 1995; Gislason et al 2004), and increases the risk of developing pancreatic cancer (Munigala et al 2014)

  • The exocrine pancreas mainly consists of pancreatic acinar cells (PACs), other less conspicuous cell types, such as pancreatic stellate cells (PSCs), are woven into the tissue

  • Two experimental models were used in this study: (1) pancreatic lobules isolated from the mouse pancreas; (2) and primary pancreatic stellate cells of human origin

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Summary

Introduction

Acute pancreatitis (AP) is a potentially severe disease with an overall mortality up to 6% (de Beaux et al 1995; Gislason et al 2004), and increases the risk of developing pancreatic cancer (Munigala et al 2014). Ca2+ signals induced by low physiological doses of agonists are predominantly restricted to the apical pole, or become only transiently global, and are sufficient for stimulation of enzyme secretion (Maruyama et al 1993; Thorn et al 1993; Gerasimenko et al 1996). Sustained Ca2+ elevations in acinar cells have been linked to premature intracellular enzyme activation, vacuolisation and cell necrosis (Kruger et al 2000; Raraty et al 2000). Those processes are the hallmark of the initial stages of acute pancreatitis

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