Abstract

Bile acid synthesis from cholesterol is tightly regulated via a feedback mechanism mediated by the farnesoid X receptor (FXR), a nuclear receptor activated by bile acids. Synthesis via the classic pathway is initiated by a series of cholesterol ring modifications and followed by the side chain cleavage. Several intermediates accumulate or are excreted as end products of the pathway in diseases involving defective bile acid biosynthesis. In this study, we investigated the ability of these intermediates to activate human FXR. In a cell-based reporter assay and coactivator recruitment assays in vitro, early intermediates possessing an intact cholesterol side chain were inactive, whereas 26- or 25-hydroxylated bile alcohols and C27 bile acids were highly efficacious ligands for FXR at a level comparable to that of the most potent physiological ligand, chenodeoxycholic acid. Treatment of HepG2 cells with these precursors repressed the rate-limiting cholesterol 7alpha-hydroxylase mRNA level and induced the small heterodimer partner and the bile salt export pump mRNA, indicating the ability to regulate bile acid synthesis and excretion. Because 26-hydroxylated bile alcohols and C27 bile acids are known to be evolutionary precursors of bile acids in mammals, our findings suggest that human FXR may have retained affinity to these precursors during evolution.

Highlights

  • Bile acid synthesis from cholesterol is tightly regulated via a feedback mechanism mediated by the farnesoid X receptor (FXR), a nuclear receptor activated by bile acids

  • We assessed the ability of a series of C27 intermediates in bile acid synthesis (Fig. 1) to activate human FXR using a transient transfection assay with a luciferase reporter plasmid containing a synthetic FXR response element, along with expression plasmids for FXR and RXR␣

  • The results of a cell-based luciferase assay showed that late intermediates in the classic pathway, including 26-OH-THC [2], 26-OH-DHC [7], dihydroxy-5␤-cholestanoic acid (DHCA) [8], and 25-OH-THC [10], possess the ability to activate hu

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Summary

Introduction

Bile acid synthesis from cholesterol is tightly regulated via a feedback mechanism mediated by the farnesoid X receptor (FXR), a nuclear receptor activated by bile acids. 5␤-cholestane-3␣,7␣,12␣triol (THC) [1] (26), 5␤-cholestane-3␣,7␣-diol (DHC) [6] (26), and Nishimaki-Mogami et al Intermediates in bile acid synthesis as ligands for FXR 1539

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