Back to Search Start Over

Lithocholic acid increases intestinal phosphate and calcium absorption in a vitamin D receptor dependent but transcellular pathway independent manner

Authors :
Takayuki Hamano
Yoshitaka Isaka
Yoshitsugu Takabatake
Tatsufumi Oka
Satoshi Yamaguchi
Satoshi Ishizuka
Dong Geun Lee
Yusuke Katsuma
Sachio Kajimoto
Yusuke Sakaguchi
Isao Matsui
Kazunori Inoue
Ayumi Matsumoto
Keiichi Kubota
Shota Hori
Yohei Doi
Karin Shimada
Nobuhiro Hashimoto
Seiichi Yasuda
Source :
Kidney international. 97(6)
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Phosphate/calcium homeostasis is crucial for health maintenance. Lithocholic acid, a bile acid produced by intestinal bacteria, is an agonist of vitamin D receptor. However, its effects on phosphate/calcium homeostasis remain unclear. Here, we demonstrated that lithocholic acid increases intestinal phosphate/calcium absorption in an enterocyte vitamin D receptor-dependent manner. Lithocholic acid was found to increase serum phosphate/calcium levels and thus to exacerbate vascular calcification in animals with chronic kidney disease. Lithocholic acid did not affect levels of intestinal sodium-dependent phosphate transport protein 2b, Pi transporter-1, -2, or transient receptor potential vanilloid subfamily member 6. Everted gut sac analyses demonstrated that lithocholic acid increased phosphate/calcium absorption in a transcellular pathway-independent manner. Lithocholic acid suppressed intestinal mucosal claudin 3 and occludin in wild-type mice, but not in vitamin D receptor knockout mice. Everted gut sacs of claudin 3 knockout mice showed an increased permeability for phosphate, but not calcium. In patients with chronic kidney disease, serum 1,25(OH)2 vitamin D levels are decreased, probably as an intrinsic adjustment to reduce phosphate/calcium burden. In contrast, serum and fecal lithocholic acid levels and fecal levels of bile acid 7α-dehydratase, a rate-limiting enzyme involved in lithocholic acid production, were not downregulated. The effects of lithocholic acid were eliminated by bile acid adsorptive resin in mice. Thus, lithocholic acid and claudin 3 may represent novel therapeutic targets for reducing phosphate burden.

Details

ISSN :
15231755
Volume :
97
Issue :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Kidney international
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f1ae4637f77fe3395bad074f2b6f2934