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1.
Cell Mol Gastroenterol Hepatol ; : 101392, 2024 Aug 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39179177

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUNDS & AIMS: Bile acids (BAs) are core gastrointestinal metabolites with dual functions in lipid absorption and cell signaling. BAs circulate between the liver and distal small intestine (i.e., ileum), yet the dynamics through which complex BA pools are absorbed in the ileum and interact with host intestinal cells in vivo remain poorly understood. As ileal absorption is rate-limiting in determining which BAs in the intestinal lumen gain access to host intestinal cells and receptors, and at what concentrations, we hypothesized that defining the rates and routes of ileal BA absorption in vivo would yield novel insights into the physiological forms and functions of mouse enterohepatic BA pools. METHODS: Using ex vivo mass spectrometry, we quantified 88 BA species and metabolites in the intestinal lumen and superior mesenteric vein of individual wild type mice, as well as cage-mates lacking the ileal BA transporter, Asbt/Slc10a2. RESULTS: Using these data, we calculated that the pool of BAs circulating through ileal tissue (i.e., the 'ileal BA pool') in fasting C57BL/6J female mice is ∼0.3 µmoles/g. Asbt-mediated transport accounted for ∼80% of this pool and amplified size. Passive permeability explained the remaining ∼20% and generated diversity. Compared with wild type mice, the ileal BA pool in Asbt-deficient mice was ∼5-fold smaller, enriched in secondary BA species and metabolites normally found in the colon, and elicited unique transcriptional responses upon addition to ex vivo-cultured ileal explants. CONCLUSIONS: This study defines quantitative traits of the mouse enterohepatic BA pool and reveals how aberrant BA metabolism can impinge directly on host intestinal physiology.

2.
bioRxiv ; 2024 Feb 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38405928

ABSTRACT

Bile acids (BAs) are gastrointestinal metabolites that serve dual functions in lipid absorption and cell signaling. BAs circulate actively between the liver and distal small intestine (i.e., ileum), yet the dynamics through which complex BA pools are absorbed in the ileum and interact with intestinal cells in vivo remain ill-defined. Through multi-site sampling of nearly 100 BA species in individual wild type mice, as well as mice lacking the ileal BA transporter, Asbt/Slc10a2, we calculate the ileal BA pool in fasting C57BL/6J mice to be ~0.3 µmoles/g. Asbt-mediated transport accounts for ~80% of this pool and amplifies size, whereas passive absorption explains the remaining ~20%, and generates diversity. Accordingly, ileal BA pools in mice lacking Asbt are ~5-fold smaller than in wild type controls, enriched in secondary BA species normally found in the colon, and elicit unique transcriptional responses in cultured ileal explants. This work quantitatively defines ileal BA pools in mice and reveals how BA dysmetabolism can impinge on intestinal physiology.

3.
Front Immunol ; 14: 1286696, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38022644

ABSTRACT

Nearly 50 ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporters are encoded by mammalian genomes. These transporters are characterized by conserved nucleotide-binding and hydrolysis (i.e., ATPase) domains, and power directional transport of diverse substrate classes - ions, small molecule metabolites, xenobiotics, hydrophobic drugs, and even polypeptides - into or out of cells or subcellular organelles. Although immunological functions of ABC transporters are only beginning to be unraveled, emerging literature suggests these proteins have under-appreciated roles in the development and function of T lymphocytes, including many of the key effector, memory and regulatory subsets that arise during responses to infection, inflammation or cancers. One transporter in particular, MDR1 (Multidrug resistance-1; encoded by the ABCB1 locus in humans), has taken center stage as a novel player in immune regulation. Although MDR1 remains widely viewed as a simple drug efflux pump in tumor cells, recent evidence suggests that this transporter fills key endogenous roles in enforcing metabolic fitness of activated CD4 and CD8 T cells. Here, we summarize current understanding of the physiological functions of ABC transporters in immune regulation, with a focus on the anti-oxidant functions of MDR1 that may shape both the magnitude and repertoires of antigen-specific effector and memory T cell compartments. While much remains to be learned about the functions of ABC transporters in immunobiology, it is already clear that they represent fertile new ground, both for the definition of novel immunometabolic pathways, and for the discovery of new drug targets that could be leveraged to optimize immune responses to vaccines and cancer immunotherapies.


Subject(s)
Membrane Transport Proteins , Neoplasms , Animals , Humans , ATP-Binding Cassette Transporters/metabolism , Drug Resistance , Adenosine Triphosphate , Mammals/metabolism
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