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Journal of Lipid Research, Vol 25, 539-549, Copyright © 1984 by Lipid Research, Inc.
AK Singhal, BI Cohen, EH Mosbach, M Une, RJ Stenger, CK McSherry, P May-Donath and T Palaia
Prairie dogs of both sexes were fed a semisynthetic diet containing 0.35%
cholesterol for a period of 8 weeks. This lithogenic diet induced
cholesterol gallstones in ten "lithogenic control animals", five males and
five females. Three animals maintained with a high glucose, fat- free diet
did not develop gallstones although the cholesterol saturation of their
bile approached unity. The formation of gallstones was prevented in four
out of five males and all five females fed the lithogenic diet plus 0.1%
hyodeoxycholic acid (30 mg per kg body weight per day). The biles of the
prairie dogs receiving hyodeoxycholic acid were abnormally colored, cloudy,
and highly saturated with cholesterol but contained neither cholesterol
crystals nor gallstones (with the exception of one male). Feeding the
relatively hydrophilic bile acid, hyodeoxycholic acid, was associated with
an increase in hepatic microsomal HMG-CoA reductase activity. Cholesterol 7
alpha-hydroxylase, on the other hand, was inhibited by the administered
bile acid. The dietary hyodeoxycholic acid was transformed, in part, to 3
alpha, 6 beta-dihydroxy-5-beta-cholanoic acid and hyocholic acid. It is
concluded that hyodeoxycholic acid and its metabolites did not prevent the
induced cholelithiasis by causing a decrease in the concentration of
biliary cholesterol. Instead, this hydrophilic bile acid apparently
increases the amount of cholesterol in the bile, probably in the form of a
liquid crystalline mesophase. Hyodeoxycholic acid apparently prevents
gallstones by preventing the nucleation and aggregation of cholesterol
crystals. The lithogenic diet induced moderate to marked bile duct
proliferation together with portal fibrosis and inflammatory infiltration.
The addition of hyodeoxycholic acid to the lithogenic diet reduced all of
the portal tract changes.
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Prevention of cholesterol-induced gallstones by hyodeoxycholic acid in the prairie dog
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