4.8 Review

Structure and Function of Hepatobiliary ATP Binding Cassette Transporters

Journal

CHEMICAL REVIEWS
Volume 121, Issue 9, Pages 5240-5288

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.chemrev.0c00659

Keywords

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Funding

  1. German Research Foundation, DFG [CRC 575, CRC 974]
  2. German Research Foundation [417919780]

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The liver is crucial for metabolism and membrane transport proteins, especially ATP binding cassette (ABC) transporters, play a key role in signal transduction within liver cells. These transporters are essential for various functions in the liver, such as bile formation and xenobiotic export. The study of hepatobiliary ABC transporters has rapidly expanded in recent years and holds potential for new avenues in liver membrane transporter research.
The liver is beyond any doubt the most important metabolic organ of the human body. This function requires an intensive crosstalk within liver cellular structures, but also with other organs. Membrane transport proteins are therefore of upmost importance as they represent the sensors and mediators that shuttle signals from outside to the inside of liver cells and/or vice versa. In this review, we summarize the known literature of liver transport proteins with a clear emphasis on functional and structural information on ATP binding cassette (ABC) transporters, which are expressed in the human liver. These primary active membrane transporters form one of the largest families of membrane proteins. In the liver, they play an essential role in for example bile formation or xenobiotic export. Our review provides a state of the art and comprehensive summary of the current knowledge of hepatobiliary ABC transporters. Clearly, our knowledge has improved with a breath-taking speed over the last few years and will expand further. Thus, this review will provide the status quo and will lay the foundation for new and exciting avenues in liver membrane transporter research.

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