4.5 Article Proceedings Paper

Oxidative stress induces internalization of the bile salt export pump, Bsep, and bile salt secretory failure in isolated rat hepatocyte couplets:: A role for protein kinase C and prevention by protein kinase A

Journal

TOXICOLOGICAL SCIENCES
Volume 91, Issue 1, Pages 150-158

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/toxsci/kfj113

Keywords

systems toxicology; oxidative injury; biotransformation and toxicokinetics; biliary excretion; xenobiotic transporters; in vitro alternatives; hepatocytes; systems toxicology; signal transduction

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We have shown that Ca2+-mediated protein kinase C (PKC) activation induces impairment of bile salt secretory function and F-actin redistribution in hepatocyte couplets. Because oxidative stress induces Ca2+ elevation, we tested here whether PKC inhibition or protein kinase A (PKA) activation, which often counteracts PKC-dependent effects, can prevent and reverse these alterations. The pro-oxidant compounds tert-butylhydroperoxide (tBOOH, 100 mu M) and 2,3-dimethoxy-1,4-naphthoquinone (30 mu M), reduced by -41% and -29%, respectively, the percentage of couplets accumulating the fluorescent bile salt analog, cholyl-lysylfluorescein in their canalicular vacuoles (p < 0.01). tBOOH-induced bile salt secretory failure was accompanied by internalization of the canalicular bile salt export pump (Bsep), and disarrangement of cytoskeletal F-actin. All these deleterious effects were fully prevented by the intracellular Ca2+ chelator BAPTA/AM (20 mu M), the pan-specific PKC inhibitors H7 (100 mu M) and staurosporine (1 mu M), the inhibitor of Ca2+-dependent PKCs, Go6976 (2 mu M), and the PKA activator dibutyryl-cAMP (500 mu M). H7, Go6976, and dibutyryl-cAMP not only prevented but also fully reversed the decrease in the cholyl-lysyl-fluorescein accumulation. In conclusion, these results suggest that low levels of oxidative stress impair bile salt secretion by internalizing Bsep through a Ca2+-dependent, PKC-mediated mechanism, and that inhibition of PKC, or activation of PKA, prevents and reverses these effects. Alterations in actin organization may be a causal factor.

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