Abstract

BackgroundA disruption of cholesterol homeostasis characterized by the physical-chemical imbalance of cholesterol solubility in bile often results in formation of cholesterol gallstones. Our earlier studies revealed that curcumin (1000 mg/kg) could prevent formation of gallstones. It has been proved that curcumin is poorly absorbed while piperine is a bioavailability-enhancer. Nevertheless, whether curcumin combined with piperine could enhance the effect of curcumin in preventing gallstones is still awaited.MethodC57BL6 mice were fed on a lithogenic diet concomitant with curcumin at 500 or 1000 mg/kg and/or piperine at 20 mg/kg for 4 weeks. The ratio of gallbladder stone formation was recorded and samples of blood, bile, gallbladder, liver and small intestine were also collected. The volume of gallbladder and weight of liver were calculated, and blood and bile samples were analyzed through biochemical methods. Intestinal NPC1L1 and SREBP2 mRNA and protein expression were detected by real-time PCR and Western blot.ResultCombining with piperine can significantly enhance the effect of curcumin, thus preventing the development of gallbladder stones, lowering the saturation of blood lipids and cholesterol in bile, as well as decreasing the expression of NPC1L1 and SREBP2 in both mRNA and protein levels.ConclusionCurcumin can prevent the formation of cholesterol gallstones induced by high fat diet in mice and SREBP2 and NPC1L1 may participate in this process. Piperine can increase curcumin’s bioavailability, thereby enhancing the effect of curcumin.

Highlights

  • A disruption of cholesterol homeostasis characterized by the physical-chemical imbalance of cholesterol solubility in bile often results in formation of cholesterol gallstones

  • Curcumin can prevent the formation of cholesterol gallstones induced by high fat diet in mice and sterol response element-binding protein 2 (SREBP2) and Niemann-Pick C1-like 1 (NPC1L1) may participate in this process

  • A disruption of cholesterol homeostasis characterized by the physical-chemical imbalance of cholesterol solubility in bile often results in development of cholesterol gallstones

Read more

Summary

Introduction

A disruption of cholesterol homeostasis characterized by the physical-chemical imbalance of cholesterol solubility in bile often results in formation of cholesterol gallstones. A disruption of cholesterol homeostasis characterized by the physical-chemical imbalance of cholesterol solubility in bile often results in development of cholesterol gallstones. The homeostasis of cholesterol in human body mainly depends on its synthesis, absorption from intestine and secretion of the bile, of which the metabolic process is under precise regulation [1]. Suresh et al [15] found that curcumin concomitant with piperine (20 mg/kg) reduced curcumin’s metabolic breakdown rate, which lead to prolonged retention of curcumin in the body, and enhanced the intestinal absorption of curcumin. We attempted to find out whether lower dose of curcumin combined with piperine could have the same effect on gallstone-susceptible C57BL6 mice. We explored if NPC1L1 and SREBP2 had participated in this process

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call