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  • Title: The hepatocellular bile acid transporter Ntcp facilitates uptake of the lethal mushroom toxin alpha-amanitin.
    Author: Gundala S, Wells LD, Milliano MT, Talkad V, Luxon BA, Neuschwander-Tetri BA.
    Journal: Arch Toxicol; 2004 Feb; 78(2):68-73. PubMed ID: 14598021.
    Abstract:
    Hepatotoxicity caused by the mushroom poison alpha-amanitin is an unusual but serious cause of death and liver transplantation. Understanding the mechanisms of alpha-amanitin uptake may lead to rational therapeutic approaches. Because older data suggested that a sodium-dependent bile acid transporter is responsible for alpha-amanitin uptake, we tested the hypothesis that Na(+)-taurocholate cotransporter polypeptide (Ntcp) facilitates hepatocellular alpha-amanitin uptake. Human hepatoblastoma cells (HepG2), cells that have lost native Ntcp expression, were stably transfected with the rat Ntcp gene. Taurocholate uptake by the transfected cells exhibited a physiologically normal K(m) and V(max). A toxicologically relevant functional assay for alpha-amanitin uptake was developed by measuring its ability to block cytokine-induced synthesis of interleukin-1 receptor antagonist (IL-1Ra) mRNA. Treatment with interleukin-1beta (10 ng/ml) and interleukin-6 (100 ng/ml) increased IL-1Ra mRNA abundance 8.6-fold and 15.6-fold in HepG2 cells and Ntcp-transfected cells, respectively. Pretreatment of transfected cells with 1 micro M alpha-amanitin for 6-10 h almost completely blocked induction of IL-1Ra mRNA (1.9-fold induction) whereas pretreatment of non-transfected cells did not block induction of IL-1Ra mRNA (21.6-fold induction, P<0.02 compared with stimulated transfected cells without alpha-amanitin). These findings demonstrate that Ntcp may be an important mediator of alpha-amanitin uptake by the liver.
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