Abstract

This study investigated whether beta-muricholic acid, a natural trihydroxy hydrophilic bile acid of rodents, acts as a biliary cholesterol-desaturating agent to prevent cholesterol gallstones and if it facilitates the dissolution of gallstones compared with ursodeoxycholic acid (UDCA). For gallstone prevention study, gallstone-susceptible male C57L mice were fed 8 weeks with a lithogenic diet (2% cholesterol and 0.5% cholic acid) with or without 0.5% UDCA or beta-muricholic acid. For gallstone dissolution study, additional groups of mice that have formed gallstones were fed chow with or without 0.5% beta-muricholic acid or UDCA for 8 weeks. One hundred percent of mice fed the lithogenic diet formed cholesterol gallstones. Addition of beta-muricholic acid and UDCA decreased gallstone prevalence to 20% and 50% through significantly reducing biliary secretion rate, saturation index, and intestinal absorption of cholesterol, as well as inducing phase boundary shift and an enlarged Region E that prevented the transition of cholesterol from its liquid crystalline phase to solid crystals and stones. Eight weeks of beta-muricholic acid and UDCA administration produced complete gallstone dissolution rates of 100% and 60% compared with the chow (10%). We conclude that beta-muricholic acid is more effective than UDCA in treating or preventing diet-induced or experimental cholesterol gallstones in mice.

Highlights

  • This study investigated whether ␤-muricholic acid, a natural trihydroxy hydrophilic bile acid of rodents, acts as a biliary cholesterol-desaturating agent to prevent cholesterol gallstones and if it facilitates the dissolution of gallstones compared with ursodeoxycholic acid (UDCA)

  • Our results showed that ␤-muricholic acid is more effective than UDCA in preventing cholesterol gallstones through inhibiting intestinal cholesterol absorption, decreasing biliary cholesterol secretion, and retarding phase separation from vesicular cholesterol to crystalline cholesterol monohydrate in bile of C57L mice

  • We investigated effects of ␤-muricholic acid on hepatic and biliary cholesterol metabolism and intestinal cholesterol absorption, as well as gallstone prevention and dissolution compared with UDCA in gallstone-susceptible C57L mice

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Summary

Introduction

This study investigated whether ␤-muricholic acid, a natural trihydroxy hydrophilic bile acid of rodents, acts as a biliary cholesterol-desaturating agent to prevent cholesterol gallstones and if it facilitates the dissolution of gallstones compared with ursodeoxycholic acid (UDCA). Our results showed that ␤-muricholic acid is more effective than UDCA in preventing cholesterol gallstones through inhibiting intestinal cholesterol absorption, decreasing biliary cholesterol secretion, and retarding phase separation from vesicular cholesterol to crystalline cholesterol monohydrate in bile of C57L mice. It is more successful than UDCA in promoting the dissolution of cholesterol gallstones through a greater capacity to form a liquid crystalline phase. We conclude that ␤-muricholic acid could be a potential cholelitholytic agent for preventing or treating diet-induced or experimental cholesterol gallstones in mice

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