Digestive and Liver Disease
Volume 42, Issue 6 , Pages 409-418, June 2010

Bile salts and cholestasis

  • Lucas Maillette de Buy Wenniger
  • ,
  • Ulrich Beuers

      Affiliations

    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author at: Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Tytgat Institute for Liver and Intestinal Research, Academic Medical Center, G4-213, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands. Tel.: +31 20 5662422.

Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Tytgat Institute for Liver and Intestinal Research, Academic Medical Center, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands

Received 13 March 2010; accepted 13 March 2010. published online 03 May 2010.

Abstract 

Bile salts have a crucial role in hepatobiliary and intestinal homeostasis and digestion. Primary bile salts are synthesized by the liver from cholesterol, and may be modified by the intestinal flora to form secondary and tertiary bile salts. Bile salts are efficiently reabsorbed from the intestinal lumen to undergo enterohepatic circulation. In addition to their function as a surfactant involved in the absorption of dietary lipids and fat-soluble vitamins bile salts are potent signaling molecules in both the liver and intestine.

Under physiological conditions the bile salt pool is tightly regulated, but the adaptive capacity may fall short under cholestatic conditions. Elevated serum and tissue levels of potentially toxic hydrophobic bile salts during cholestasis may cause mitochondrial damage, apoptosis or necrosis in susceptible cell types.

Therapeutic nontoxic bile salts may restore impaired hepatobiliary secretion in cholestatic disorders. The hydrophilic bile salt ursodeoxycholate is today regarded as the effective standard treatment of primary biliary cirrhosis and intrahepatic cholestasis of pregnancy, and is implicated for use in various other cholestatic conditions. Novel therapeutic bile salts that are currently under evaluation may also prove valuable in the treatment of these diseases.

Keywords: Bile acids, Chenodeoxycholate, Primary biliary cirrhosis, Primary sclerosing cholangitis, Ursodeoxycholate

 

PII: S1590-8658(10)00106-4

doi:10.1016/j.dld.2010.03.015

Digestive and Liver Disease
Volume 42, Issue 6 , Pages 409-418, June 2010