Abstract

To further define thyroid hormone effects on bile acid synthesis and biliary lipid secretion, studies were done in chronic bile fistula rats. Euthyroid and methimazole-hypothyroid rats, with and without triiodothyronine (T3) injection, had total bile diversion for timed bile collections. With interrupted enterohepatic circulation, cholesterol absorption is negligible and bile acid secretion equals bile acid synthesis rate. Hypothyroid rats had diminished levels of bile acid synthesis and biliary secretion of cholesterol and phospholipid. Single dose T3 injection produced a 13-fold increase in bile cholesterol secretion and a 3-fold increase in phospholipid secretion, both initiated 12 h after T3. Bile acid synthesis increased by 50%, but the increase did not begin until 24 h after T3. Neither hypothyroidism nor T3 treatment abolished diurnal rhythms of bile acid synthesis and biliary lipid secretion. Inhibition of cholesterol synthesis with lovastatin resulted in a persistent 33% decrease in bile acid synthesis in euthyroid and hypothyroid rats, while bile cholesterol secretion only transiently decreased. Inhibition of cholesterol synthesis did not alter T3-induced bile cholesterol secretion, with a 10-fold increase seen. However, bile acid synthesis was not stimulated by T3 in the presence of lovastatin. We conclude that facilitated bile acid synthesis and biliary cholesterol secretion are early effects of T3 and may account for the hypocholesterolemia of T3. Cholesterol synthesis does not appear to be required for the T3-induced bile cholesterol secretion.

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