1. Partitioning of bile acids into subcellular organelles and the in vivo distribution of bile acids in rat liver.
- Author
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Strange RC, Chapman BT, Johnston JD, Nimmo IA, and Percy-Robb IW
- Subjects
- Animals, Cell Nucleus metabolism, Chenodeoxycholic Acid metabolism, Cholic Acids metabolism, Cytosol metabolism, Glycocholic Acid metabolism, In Vitro Techniques, Male, Microsomes, Liver metabolism, Mitochondria, Liver metabolism, Models, Biological, Rats, Solubility, Bile Acids and Salts metabolism, Liver metabolism, Subcellular Fractions metabolism
- Abstract
1. The subcellular distribution of conjugates of cholic acid and chenodeoxycholic acid between cytosol, nuclei, mitochondria and microsomes in rat liver has been determined. 2. The partition coefficients for the distribution of these bile acids between subcellular fractions and buffer have been measured and used to construct a compartmental model of the amounts of conjugated bile acids present in the different subcellular organelles in vivo. 3. This model indicates that a large percentage of the bile acid in the rat liver is found in the nuclear fraction; 42% of the cholic acid conjugates and 27% of the chenodeoxycholic acid conjugates. Substantial amounts of bile acid are also present in microsomes and mitochondria suggesting that published estimates of the amounts of bile acids in these fractions are underestimates. 4. The model also allows the amount of bile acid which is in free solution in cytosol to be determined; 10.9% of the cholic acid conjugates and 4.1% of the chenodeoxycholic acid conjugates in rat liver were present in this fraction. Knowlege of the amount of free bile acid allows possible roles of the cytosolic bile binding proteins to be assessed.
- Published
- 1979
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