Abstract

Cyclosporine A (CsA) reduces liver canalicular membrane (CM) fluidity to cause a disproportionate reduction of biliary lipid secretion (the uncoupling phenomenon) without affecting adenosine triphosphate-dependent (ABC) transporters except for Mdr1. This study investigated whether hydrophilic bile salts inhibit CsA-induced cholestasis, focusing on CM fluidity and ABC transporter expression. Male Sprague–Dawley rats were infused with taurocholate (TC) (200 nmol/min/100 g body weight) for 2 h, flowed by infusion with tauroursodeoxycholate (TUDC), tauroalphamuricholate, or taurobetamuricholate (100 nmol/min/100 g body weight plus TC at 100 nmol/min/100 g body weight). Thereafter, CsA (20 mg/kg body weight) was injected as a bolus and bile was collected for 2 h. Canalicular membrane vesicles were prepared for analysis of cholesterol (CH), phospholipid (PL), CM fluidity, and expression of ABC transporters (Mdr1, Bsep, Mdr2, and Mrp2). CsA administration reduced biliary lipid secretion along with a disproportionately smaller decline of bile salt secretion. Hydrophilic bile salts significantly inhibited cholestasis after CsA injection by increasing CM fluidity and by increasing the expression of Mrp2 and Bsep, whereas Mdr1 and Mdr2 were unaltered. (1) Hydrophilic bile salts inhibit CsA-induced cholestasis, presumably by increasing CM fluidity, and this action was greatest with TUDC. (2) The fact that ABC transporters, except for Mdr1 and Mdr2, were overexpressed in the CM after infusion of these bile salts suggests that cytoprotective bile salts functions may increase transporter mass as well as enhancing transporter activity.

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