Abstract

The enterohepatic circulation (EHC) of bile acids (BAs) plays a pivotal role in facilitating lipid absorption. Therefore, initiation of the EHC in newborns is of crucial importance for lipid absorption from milk. The purpose of this study was to determine at what age BA transporters in liver are expressed, and the mechanism for their initiation. Serum and liver samples were collected from C57BL/6 mice at 2 days before birth and various postnatal ages. Messenger RNA assays revealed a dramatic increase at birth in the expression of the BA transporters (Ntcp, Bsep, Mrp4, Ostβ), as well as the phospholipid floppase Mdr2 in mouse liver, with the highest expression at 1 day of age. The mRNA expression of the ileal BA transporters (Ostα and Ostβ) also markedly increased at birth. Meanwhile, taurine-conjugated cholic acid markedly increased in both serum and liver of newborns, correlated with upregulation of the classic pathway of BA biosynthesis in newborn liver. The mRNA levels of the major BA sensors, FXR and PXR, were increased at 1 day of age, and their prototypical target genes were upregulated in liver. The mRNA expression of transporters involved in the EHC of BAs was similar in wild-type and PXR-null mice. In contrast, in FXR-null mice, the "day 1 surge" pattern of Ntcp, Bsep, Ostβ, and Mdr2 was blocked in newborn mouse liver, and the induction of Ostα and Ostβ was also abolished in ileums of FXR-null mice. In conclusion, at birth, BAs from the classic pathway of synthesis trigger the induction of transporters involved in EHC of BAs in mice, through activation of the nuclear receptor FXR.

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