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  4. NTCP deficiency in mice protects against obesity and hepatosteatosis
 
research article

NTCP deficiency in mice protects against obesity and hepatosteatosis

Donkers, Joanne M.
•
Kooijman, Sander
•
Slijepcevic, Davor
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July 25, 2019
Jci Insight

Bile acids play a major role in the regulation of lipid and energy metabolism. Here we propose the hepatic bile acid uptake transporter Na+ taurocholate cotransporting polypeptide (NTCP) as a target to prolong postprandial bile acid elevations in plasma. Reducing hepatic clearance of bile acids from plasma by genetic deletion of NTCP moderately increased plasma bile acid levels, reduced diet-induced obesity, attenuated hepatic steatosis, and lowered plasma cholesterol levels. NTCP and G protein-coupled bile acid receptor-double KO (TGR5-double KO) mice were equally protected against diet-induced obesity as NTCP-single KO mice. NTCP-KO mice displayed decreased intestinal fat absorption and a trend toward higher fecal energy output. Furthermore, NTCP deficiency was associated with an increased uncoupled respiration in brown adipose tissue, leading to increased energy expenditure. We conclude that targeting NTCP-mediated bile acid uptake can be a novel approach to treat obesity and obesity-related hepatosteatosis by simultaneously dampening intestinal fat absorption and increasing energy expenditure.

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127197.2-20190701161947-covered-e0fd13ba177f913fd3156f593ead4cfd.pdf

Type

Publisher's Version

Version

http://purl.org/coar/version/c_970fb48d4fbd8a85

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openaccess

License Condition

CC BY

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3.67 MB

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Adobe PDF

Checksum (MD5)

63d35098a67a030fee4b6173164f8046

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