4.6 Article

Ileal bile acid-binding protein, functionally associated with the farnesoid X receptor or the ileal bile acid transporter, regulates bile acid activity in the small intestine

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 280, Issue 51, Pages 42283-42289

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M507454200

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Bile acids secreted in the small intestine are reabsorbed in the ileum where they activate the nuclear farnesoid X receptor (FXR), which in turn stimulates expression of the ileal bile acid-binding protein (I-BABP). We first hypothesized that I-BABP may negatively regulate the FXR activity by competing for the ligands, bile acids. Reporter assays using stable HEK293 cell lines expressing I-BABP revealed that I-BABP enhances rather than attenuates FXR activity. In these cells I-BABP localizes predominantly in the cytosol and partially in the nucleus, a distribution that does not shift in response to FXR expression. In vitro binding assays reveal that recombinant I-BABP is able to bind S-35-labeled FXR and that chenodeoxycholic acid (CDCA) stimulates this interaction modestly. When FLAG-tagged FXR was expressed in stable cells, the (FXRI)-I-.-BABP complex in the nuclear extracts was more efficiently immunoprecipitable with anti-FLAG antibodies in the presence of CDCA. These results indicate that I-BABP stimulates FXR activity through a mutual interaction augmented by bile acids. When stable cells were transfected with an expression plasmid of the ileal bile acid transporter (IBAT) essential for the reabsorption of conjugated bile acids, the C-14-labeled conjugated bile acid, glycocholic acid, was more efficiently imported via IBAT in the presence than absence of I-BABP, whereas no change was observed in C-14-labeled CDCA uptake, which is independent of IBAT. Immunofluorescent staining analysis revealed that these two proteins co-localize in the vicinity of the plasma membrane in stable cells. Taken together, the current data provide the first evidence that I-BABP is functionally associated with FXR and IBAT in the nucleus and on the membrane, respectively, stimulating FXR transcriptional activity and the conjugated bile acid uptake mediated by IBAT in the ileum.

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