UDCA (ursodeoxycholic acid) is the therapeutic agent most widely used for the treatment of cholestatic hepatopathies. Its use has expanded to other kinds of hepatic diseases, and even to extrahepatic ones. Such versatility is the result of its multiple mechanisms of action. UDCA stabilizes plasma membranes against cytolysis by tensioactive bile acids accumulated in cholestasis. UDCA also halts apoptosis by preventing the formation of mitochondrial pores, membrane recruitment of death receptors and endoplasmic-reticulum stress. In addition, UDCA induces changes in the expression of metabolizing enzymes and transporters that reduce bile acid cytotoxicity and improve renal excretion. Its capability to positively modulate ductular bile flow helps to preserve the integrity of bile ducts. UDCA also prevents the endocytic internalization of canalicular transporters, a common feature in cholestasis. Finally, UDCA has immunomodulatory properties that limit the exacerbated immunological response occurring in autoimmune cholestatic diseases by counteracting the overexpression of MHC antigens and perhaps by limiting the production of cytokines by immunocompetent cells. Owing to this multi-functionality, it is difficult to envisage a substitute for UDCA that combines as many hepatoprotective effects with such efficacy. We predict a long-lasting use of UDCA as the therapeutic agent of choice in cholestasis.
Complement, an important effector mechanism of the immune system, is an enzymatic cascade of approx. 30 serum proteins leading to the amplification of a specific humoral response. It can be activated through the classical or alternative pathways, or through the mannose-binding lectin pathway. The activation of the classical pathway is initiated by the binding of the C1 component to antigen-bound antibodies, known as immunocomplexes. C1 is a complex of one molecule of C1q, two molecules of C1r and two molecules of C1s. C1q contains three copies of a Y-shaped fundamental unit with globular heads included in its structure, which play a major role in the interaction with the Fc portion of immunoglobulins. Deficient or exacerbated activation of the complement system leads to diseases of variable severity, and pharmacological inhibition of the complement system is considered as a therapeutic strategy to ameliorate the inflammatory effects of exacerbated complement activation. Bilirubin is a product of haem degradation by the concerted action of haem oxygenase, which converts haem into biliverdin, and biliverdin reductase, which reduces biliverdin to UCB (unconjugated bilirubin). UCB exerts both cytoprotective and cytotoxic effects in a variety of tissues and cells, acting either as an antioxidant at low concentrations or as an oxidant at high concentrations. In the present review, we describe in detail the anti-complement properties of bilirubin, occurring at levels above the UCB concentrations found in normal human serum, as a beneficial effect of potential clinical relevance. We provide evidence that UCB interferes with the interaction between C1q and immunoglobulins, thus inhibiting the initial step in the activation of complement through the classical pathway. A molecular model is proposed for the interaction between UCB and C1q.
Estradiol-17ß-D-glucuronide (E17G) activates different signaling pathways (e.g., Ca 21 -dependent protein kinase C, phosphoinositide 3-kinase/protein kinase B, mitogenactivated protein kinases [MAPKs] p38 and extracellular signal-related kinase 1/2, and estrogen receptor alpha) that lead to acute cholestasis in rat liver with retrieval of the canalicular transporters, bile salt export pump (Abcb11) and multidrug resistanceassociated protein 2 (Abcc2). E17G shares with nonconjugated estradiol the capacity to activate these pathways. G-protein-coupled receptor 30 (GPR30) is a receptor implicated in nongenomic effects of estradiol, and the aim of this study was to analyze the potential role of this receptor and its downstream effectors in E17G-induced cholestasis. In vitro, GPR30 inhibition by G15 or its knockdown with small interfering RNA strongly prevented E17G-induced impairment of canalicular transporter function and localization. E17G increased cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) levels, and this increase was blocked by G15, linking GPR30 to adenylyl cyclase (AC). Moreover, AC inhibition totally prevented E17G insult. E17G also increased protein kinase A (PKA) activity, which was blocked by G15 and AC inhibitors, connecting the links of the pathway, GPR30-AC-PKA. PKA inhibition prevented E17G-induced cholestasis, whereas exchange protein activated directly by cyclic nucleotide/MAPK kinase, another cAMP downstream effector, was not implicated in cAMP cholestatic action. In the perfused rat liver model, inhibition of the GPR30-AC-PKA pathway totally prevented E17G-induced alteration in Abcb11 and Abcc2 function and localization. Conclusion: Activation of GPR30-AC-PKA is a key factor in the alteration of canalicular transporter function and localization induced by E17G. Interaction of E17G with GPR30 may be the first event in the cascade of signaling activation. (HEPATOLOGY 2014;59:1016-1029 H epatocanalicular adenosine-triphosphatedependent transporters are essential for bile secretion 1 and alteration in their expression, localization, or activity results in secretory failure and cholestasis. 2,3 Two of the most relevant canalicular transporters are the bile salt export pump (Abcb11; also named Bsep), which transports monoanionic bile salts, and multidrug resistance-associated protein 2 (Abcc2;
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