Abstract
Quantitative trait mapping identified a locus colocalizing with L-Fabp, encoding liver fatty acid binding protein, as a positional candidate for murine gallstone susceptibility. When fed a lithogenic diet (LD) for 2 weeks, L-Fabp-/- mice became hypercholesterolemic with increased hepatic VLDL cholesterol secretion. Seventy-five percent of L-Fabp-/- mice developed solid gallstones compared with 6% of wild-type mice with an increased gallstone score (3.29 versus 0.62, respectively; P, 0.01). Hepatic free cholesterol content, biliary cholesterol secretion, and the cholesterol saturation index of hepatic bile were increased in LD-fed L-Fabp-/- mice. Chow-fed L-Fabp-/- mice demonstrated increased fecal bile acid (BA) excretion accompanied by decreased ileal Asbt expression. By contrast, there was an increased BA pool and decreased fecal BA excretion in LD-fed L-Fabp-/- mice, associated with increased proximal intestinal Asbt mRNA expression, suggesting that intestinal BA absorption was enhanced in LD-fed L-Fabp-/- mice. The increase in biliary BA secretion and enterohepatic pool size in LD-fed L-Fabp-/- mice was accompanied by downregulation of Cyp7a1 mRNA and increased intestinal mRNA abundance of Fgf-15, Fxr, and Fabp6. These findings suggest that changes in hepatic cholesterol metabolism and biliary lipid secretion as well as changes in enterohepatic BA metabolism increase gallstone susceptibility in LD fed L-Fabp-/- mice. Copyright © 2009 by the American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.
Author supplied keywords
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Xie, Y., Newberry, E. P., Kennedy, S. M., Luo, J., & Davidson, N. O. (2009). Increased susceptibility to diet-induced gallstones in liver fatty acid binding protein knockout mice. Journal of Lipid Research, 50(5), 977–987. https://doi.org/10.1194/jlr.M800645-JLR200
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.