Annals of Hepatology (Jul 2008)

Hepatic insulin resistance ties cholesterol gallstone formation and the metabolic syndrome

  • Peter Kovacs,
  • Ulrike Kurtz,
  • Henning Wittenburg

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 3
pp. 262 – 264

Abstract

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Biddinger SB, Haas JT, Yu BB, Bezy O, Jing E, Zhang W, Unterman TG, Carey MC, Kahn CR. Hepatic insulin resistance directly promotes formation of cholesterol gallstones. Nature Medicine 2008; 14: 778–782.Despite the well-documented association between gallstones and the metabolic syndrome,1,2the mechanistic links between these two disorders remain unknown. Here we show that mice solely with hepatic insulin resistance, created by liver-specific disruption of the insulin receptor (LIRKO mice)3are markedly predisposed toward cholesterol gallstone formation due to at least two distinct mechanisms. Disinhibition of the forkhead transcription factor FoxOl, increases expression of the biliary cholesterol transporters Abcg5 and Abcg8, resulting in an increase in biliary cholesterol secretion. Hepatic insulin resistance also decreases expression of the bile acid synthetic enzymes, particularly Cyp7b1, and produces partial resistance to the farnesoid X receptor, leading to a lithogenic bile salt profile. As a result, after twelve weeks on a lithogenic diet, all of the LIRKO mice develop gallstones. Thus, hepatic insulin resistance provides a crucial link between the metabolic syndrome and increased cholesterol gallstone susceptibility.Abstract published under permission of the Nature Publishing Group.

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