Species differences in hepatobiliary disposition of taurocholic acid in human and rat sandwich-cultured hepatocytes: Implications for drug-induced liver injury

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Abstract

The bile salt export pump (BSEP) plays an important role in bile acid excretion. Impaired BSEP function may result in liver injury. Bile acids also undergo basolateral efflux, but the relative contributions of biliary (CL Bile) versus basolateral efflux (CL BL) clearance to hepatocellular bile acid excretion have not been determined. In the present study, taurocholic acid (TCA; a model bile acid) disposition was characterized in human and rat sandwich-cultured hepatocytes (SCH) combined with pharmacokinetic modeling. In human SCH, biliary excretion of TCA predominated (CL Bile = 0.14 ± 0.04 ml/min per g liver; CL BL = 0.042 ± 0.019 ml/min per g liver), whereas CL Bile and CL BL contributed approximately equally to TCA hepatocellular excretion in rat SCH (CL Bile = 0.34 ± 0.07 ml/min per g liver; CL BL = 0.26 ± 0.07 ml/min per g liver). Troglitazone decreased TCA uptake, CL Bile, and CL BL; membrane vesicle assays revealed for the first time that the major metabolite, troglitazone sulfate, was a noncompetitive inhibitor of multidrug resistance-associated protein 4, a basolateral bile acid efflux transporter. Simulations revealed that decreased CL Bile led to a greater increase in hepatic TCA exposure in human than in rat SCH. A decrease in both excretory pathways (CL Bile and CL BL) exponentially increased hepatic TCA in both species, suggesting that 1) drugs that inhibit both pathways may have a greater risk for hepatotoxicity, and 2) impaired function of an alternate excretory pathway may predispose patients to hepatotoxicity when drugs that inhibit one pathway are administered. Simulations confirmed the protective role of uptake inhibition, suggesting that a drug's inhibitory effects on bile acid uptake also should be considered when evaluating hepatotoxic potential. Overall, the current study precisely characterized basolateral efflux of TCA, revealed species differences in hepatocellular TCA efflux pathways, and provided insights about altered hepatic bile acid exposure when multiple transport pathways are impaired.

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Yang, K., Pfeifer, N. D., Köck, K., & Brouwer, K. L. R. (2015). Species differences in hepatobiliary disposition of taurocholic acid in human and rat sandwich-cultured hepatocytes: Implications for drug-induced liver injury. Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics, 353(2), 415–423. https://doi.org/10.1124/jpet.114.221564

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