Dietary cholesterol does not normalize low plasma cholesterol levels but induces hyperbilirubinemia and hypercholanemia in Mdr2 P-glycoprotein-deficient mice
- PMID: 11281547
- DOI: 10.1016/s0168-8278(00)00021-0
Dietary cholesterol does not normalize low plasma cholesterol levels but induces hyperbilirubinemia and hypercholanemia in Mdr2 P-glycoprotein-deficient mice
Abstract
Background/aims: Mdr2 P-glycoprotein deficiency in mice (Mdr2(-/-) leads to formation of cholesterol/cholesterol-depleted bile and reduced plasma HDL cholesterol. We addressed the questions: (1) does HDL in Mdr2(-/-) mice normalize upon phospholipid and/or cholesterol feeding, and (2): is the Mdr2(-/-) liver capable of handling excess dietary cholesterol.
Methods: Male and female Mdr2(-/-) and Mdr2(+/+) mice were fed diets with or without additional phosphatidylcholine and/or cholesterol. Plasma, hepatic and biliary lipids as well as liver function parameters and expression of transport proteins involved in bile formation were analyzed.
Results: Feeding excess phospholipids and/or cholesterol did not affect lipoprotein levels in Mdr2(+/+) or Mdr2(-/+) mice. Dietary cholesterol caused hyperbilirubinemia (male +100%; female +500%) and elevated plasma bile salts (male +200%; female +1250%) in Mdr2(-/-) mice only, independent of phospholipids. Bile flow nor biliary bile salt and bilirubin secretion were affected in cholesterol-fed Mdr2(-/-) mice. Elevated plasma bile salts may be related to cholesterol-induced reduction of hepatic Na+-taurocholate cotransporting protein expression in Mdr2(-/-) mice.
Conclusion: Excess dietary phospholipids and cholesterol do not normalize low HDL associated with Mdr2 P-glycoprotein-deficiency. Induction of hyperbilirubinemia and hypercholanemia by dietary cholesterol in Mdr2(-/-) mice delineates the important role of biliary lipid secretion in normal hepatic functioning.
Comment in
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Cholesterol and cholestasis: a lesson from the Mdr2 (-/-) mouse.J Hepatol. 2001 Feb;34(2):339-41. doi: 10.1016/s0168-8278(00)00111-2. J Hepatol. 2001. PMID: 11281567 Review. No abstract available.
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