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Vol. 281, Issue 1, 412-419, 1997
Medical Sciences Program, Indiana University School of Medicine,
Bloomington, Indiana
Divergent opinions regarding the effect of streptozotocin- (STZ)
induced diabetes on bile flow rate may be due to the differing lengths
of time after STZ administration at which bile flow was measured. Also,
the biliary excretion of bile acids can influence the canalicular
transport of several organic anions. Therefore, the hepatic clearance
of the bile acid-dependent organic anion rose bengal was studied over a
30-day period in STZ-induced insulin-dependent Sprague-Dawley diabetic
rats with elevated bile acid pools and in fatty noninsulin-dependent
diabetic and lean Wistar rats. Excretion of total bile acids and rose
bengal was higher in diabetic rats than in Sprague-Dawley control or
lean or fatty Wistar rats. Depletion of bile acids for 10 hr in the
30-day STZ rat prevented the increased excretion of rose bengal. Bile
flow rates in fatty and lean Wistar rats were similar to that in
Sprague-Dawley controls. Increased bile acid excretion 7 and 14 days
after STZ was not accompanied by the expected significant increase in
bile flow, reflecting decreased bile acid-independent bile flow,
regardless of method of calculation of bile flow (per g liver or per kg
body weight). By 30 days, there were significant increases in bile acid
excretion and bile flow. The increased clearance of rose bengal 7 days
after STZ indicates that pathophysiological changes in the hepatocyte begin soon after the initiation of diabetes. Studies of taurocholate uptake into liver plasma membrane vesicles indicated that the maximal
velocity of transport across the basolateral membrane was increased
with no change in Km. This change was not
observed in vesicles from insulin-treated diabetic rats. Therefore,
studies employing STZ need to allow time for STZ toxicity to be
overcome and for the pathology of diabetes to become established, to
accurately reflect the diabetic condition.