7 research outputs found
Defective hepatocyte aquaporin-8 expression and reduced canalicular membrane water permeability in estrogen-induced cholestasis
Our previous work supports a role
for aquaporin-8 (AQP8) water channels in rat hepatocyte bile formation
mainly by facilitating the osmotically driven canalicular secretion
of water. In this study, we tested whether a condition with compromised
canalicular bile secretion, i.e., the estrogen-induced intrahepatic
cholestasis, displays defective hepatocyte AQP8 functional expression.
After 17-ethinylestradiol administration (5 mgkg body
wt1 day1 for 5 days) to rats, the bile flow was reduced by 58%
(P 0.05). By subcellular fractionation and immunoblotting analysis,
we found that 34 kDa AQP8 was significantly decreased by 70% in
plasma (canalicular) and intracellular (vesicular) liver membranes.
However, 17-ethinylestradiol-induced cholestasis did not significantly
affect the protein level or the subcellular localization of
sinusoidal AQP9. Immunohistochemistry for liver AQPs confirmed
these observations. Osmotic water permeability (Pf) of canalicular
membranes, measured by stopped-flow spectrophotometry, was significantly
reduced (73 1 vs. 57 2 m/s) in cholestasis, consistent
with defective canalicular AQP8 functional expression. By Northern
blotting, we found that AQP8 mRNA expression was increased by
115% in cholestasis, suggesting a posttranscriptional mechanism of
protein level reduction. Accordingly, studies in primary cultured rat
hepatocytes indicated that the lysosomal protease inhibitor leupeptin
prevented the estrogen-induced AQP8 downregulation. In conclusion,
hepatocyte AQP8 protein expression is downregulated in estrogeninduced
intrahepatic cholestasis, presumably by lysosomal-mediated
degradation. Reduced canalicular membrane AQP8 expression is
associated with impaired osmotic membrane water permeability. Our
data support the novel notion that a defective expression of canalicular
AQP8 contributes as a mechanism for bile secretory dysfunction of
cholestatic hepatocytes
Rat hepatocyte aquaporin-8 water channels are down-regulated in extrahepatic cholestasis
Hepatocytes express the water channel aquaporin-8 (AQP8), which is mainly localized in intracellular vesicles, and its adenosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate (cAMP)-induced translocation to the plasma membrane facilitates osmotic water movement during canalicular bile secretion. Thus, defective expression of AQP8 may be associated with secretory dysfunction of hepatocytes caused by extrahepatic cholestasis. We studied the effect of 1, 3, and 7 days of bile duct ligation (BDL) on protein expression, subcellular localization, and messenger RNA (mRNA) levels of AQP8; this was determined in rat livers by immunoblotting in subcellular membranes, lot immunohistochemistry, immunogold electron microscopy, and Northern blotting. One day of BDL did not affect expression or subcellular localization of AQP8. Three days of BDL reduced the amount of intracellular AQP8 (75%; P < .001) without affecting its plasma membrane expression. Seven days after BDL, AQP8 was markedly decreased in intracellular (67%; P < .05) and plasma (56%; P < .05) membranes. Dibutyryl cAMP failed to increase AQP8 in plasma membranes from liver slices, suggesting a defective translocation of AQP8 in 7-day BDL rats. Immunohistochemistry and immunoelectron microscopy in liver sections confirmed the BDL-induced decreased expression of hepatocyte AQP8 in intracellular vesicles and canalicular mem branes. AQP8 mRNA expression was unaffected by 1-day BDL but was significantly increased by about 200% in 3- and 7-day BDL rats, indicating a postmanscriptional mechanism for protein level reduction. In conclusion, BDL-induced extrahepatic cholestasis caused posttranscriptional downregulation of hepatocyte AQP8 protein expression. Defective expression ofAQP8 water channels may contribute to bile secretory dysfunction of cholestatic hepatocytes