Impaired activity of the bile canalicular organic anion transporter (Mrp2/cmoat) is not the main cause of ethinylestradiol-induced cholestasis in the rat

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Abstract

To test the hypothesis that impaired activity of the bile canalicular organic anion transporting system mrp2 (cmoat) is a key event in the etiology of 17α-ethinylestradiol (EE)-induced intrahepatic cholestasis in rats, EE (5 mg/kg subcutaneously daily) was administered to male normal Wistar (NW) and mrp2-deficient Groningen Yellow/Transport-deficient Wistar (GY/TR-) rats. Elevated plasma bilirubin levels in GY/TR- rats increased upon EE-treatment from 65 ± 8.4 μmol/L to 183 ± 22.7 μmol/L within 3 days, whereas bilirubin levels remained unaffected in NW rats. Biliary bilirubin secretion was 1.5-fold increased in NW rats but remained unaltered in GY/TR- rats. Plasma bile salt concentrations remained unchanged in both strains, although hepatic levels of the sinusoidal Na+-taurocholate cotransporting protein (ntcp) were markedly reduced. Biliary secretion of endogenous bile salt was not affected in either strain. A clear reduction of mrp2 levels in liver plasma membranes of NW rats was found after 3 days of treatment. The bile salt-independent fraction of bile flow (BSIF) was reduced from 2.6 to 2.0 μL/min/100 g body weight in NW rats with a concomitant 62% reduction of biliary glutathione secretion. The absence of mrp2 and biliary glutathione in GY/TR- rats did not prevent induction of EE-cholestasis; a similar absolute reduction of BSIF, i.e., from 1.1 to 0.6 μL/min/100 g body weight, was found in these animals. EE treatment caused a reduction of the maximal biliary secretory rate (S(RM)) of the mrp2 substrate, dibromosulphthalein (DBSP), from 1,040 to 695 nmol/min/100 g body weight (-38%) in NW rats and from 615 to 327 nmol/min/100 g body weight (-46%) in GY/TR- rats. These results demonstrate that inhibition of mrp2 activity and/or biliary glutathione secretion is not the main cause of EE-induced cholestasis in rats. The data indicate that alternative pathways exist for the biliary secretion of bilirubin and related organic anions that are also affected by EE.

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Koopen, N. R., Wolters, H., Havinga, R., Vonk, R. J., Jansen, P. L. M., Müller, M., & Kuipers, F. (1998). Impaired activity of the bile canalicular organic anion transporter (Mrp2/cmoat) is not the main cause of ethinylestradiol-induced cholestasis in the rat. Hepatology, 27(2), 537–545. https://doi.org/10.1002/hep.510270231

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