150 research outputs found

    Effects of Deoxycholylglycine, a Conjugated Secondary Bile Acid, on Myogenic Tone and Agonist-Induced Contraction in Rat Resistance Arteries

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    Bile acids (BAs) regulate cardiovascular function via diverse mechanisms. Although in both health and disease serum glycine-conjugated BAs are more abundant than taurine-conjugated BAs, their effects on myogenic tone (MT), a key determinant of systemic vascular resistance (SVR), have not been examined.Fourth-order mesenteric arteries (170-250 ¡m) isolated from Sprague-Dawley rats were pressurized at 70 mmHg and allowed to develop spontaneous constriction, i.e., MT. Deoxycholylglycine (DCG; 0.1-100 ¡M), a glycine-conjugated major secondary BA, induced reversible, concentration-dependent reduction of MT that was similar in endothelium-intact and -denuded arteries. DCG reduced the myogenic response to stepwise increase in pressure (20 to 100 mmHg). Neither atropine nor the combination of L-NAME (a NOS inhibitor) plus indomethacin altered DCG-mediated reduction of MT. K(+) channel blockade with glibenclamide (K(ATP)), 4-aminopyradine (K(V)), BaCl(2) (K(IR)) or tetraethylammonium (TEA, K(Ca)) were also ineffective. In Fluo-2-loaded arteries, DCG markedly reduced vascular smooth muscle cell (VSM) Ca(2+) fluorescence (∼50%). In arteries incubated with DCG, physiological salt solution (PSS) with high Ca(2+) (4 mM) restored myogenic response. DCG reduced vascular tone and VSM cytoplasmic Ca(2+) responses (∼50%) of phenylephrine (PE)- and Ang II-treated arteries, but did not affect KCl-induced vasoconstriction.In rat mesenteric resistance arteries DCG reduces pressure- and agonist-induced vasoconstriction and VSM cytoplasmic Ca(2+) responses, independent of muscarinic receptor, NO or K(+) channel activation. We conclude that BAs alter vasomotor responses, an effect favoring reduced SVR. These findings are likely pertinent to vascular dysfunction in cirrhosis and other conditions associated with elevated serum BAs

    Hepatic alterations are accompanied by changes to bile acid transporter-expressing neurons in the hypothalamus after traumatic brain injury

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    Annually, there are over 2 million incidents of traumatic brain injury (TBI) and treatment options are non-existent. While many TBI studies have focused on the brain, peripheral contributions involving the digestive and immune systems are emerging as factors involved in the various symptomology associated with TBI. We hypothesized that TBI would alter hepatic function, including bile acid system machinery in the liver and brain. The results show activation of the hepatic acute phase response by 2 hours after TBI, hepatic inflammation by 6 hours after TBI and a decrease in hepatic transcription factors, Gli 1, Gli 2, Gli 3 at 2 and 24 hrs after TBI. Bile acid receptors and transporters were decreased as early as 2 hrs after TBI until at least 24 hrs after TBI. Quantification of bile acid transporter, ASBT-expressing neurons in the hypothalamus, revealed a significant decrease following TBI. These results are the first to show such changes following a TBI, and are compatible with previous studies of the bile acid system in stroke models. The data support the emerging idea of a systemic influence to neurological disorders and point to the need for future studies to better define specific mechanisms of action

    Molecular cloning of a gene encoding a 45,000-dalton polypeptide associated with bile acid 7-dehydroxylation in Eubacterium sp. strain VPI 12708.

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    Eubacterium sp. strain VPI 12708 is an intestinal anaerobic bacterium which possesses an inducible bile acid 7-dehydroxylation activity. Two cholic acid-induced polypeptides with apparent molecular weights of 27,000 and 45,000, respectively, coeluted with bile acid 7-dehydroxylation activity upon anaerobic high-performance gel filtration chromatography of crude cellular protein extracts. The 45,000-dalton polypeptide was purified to greater than 95% homogeneity by high-performance liquid chromatography gel filtration and high-performance liquid-DEAE chromatography. The first 28 amino acid residues of the N terminus of this polypeptide were determined by gas-phase sequencing, and a corresponding mixed oligonucleotide (20-mer) was synthesized. Southern blot analysis of EcoRI total digests of chromosomal DNA showed a 2.6-kilobase fragment which hybridized to the 32P-labeled 20-mer. This fragment was enriched for by size fractionation of an EcoRI total digest of genomic DNA and ligated into bacteriophage lambda gt11. Recombinant phage containing the putative gene encoding the 45,000-dalton polypeptide were detected with the 32P-labeled 20-mer by plaque hybridization techniques. The insert was 2.6 kilobases in length and may contain the entire coding sequence for the 45,000-dalton polypeptide. The 2.6-kilobase insert was subcloned into pUC8 and transformed into Escherichia coli DH5 alpha. However, the 45,000-dalton polypeptide was not detected in cell extracts of this organism when specific antibody was used. Preliminary nucleic acid sequence data correlated exactly with the amino acid sequence. A cholic acid-induced mRNA species of greater than 6 kilobases in size was identified by Northern (RNA) blot analysis of total RNA, suggesting that the gene coding for this polypeptide is part of a larger operon
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