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 Bile acid transporters Dawson PA; Lan T; Rao AJ Lipid Res  2009[Dec]; 50 (12): 2340-57In liver and intestine, transporters play a critical role in maintaining the  enterohepatic circulation and bile acid homeostasis. Over the past two decades,  there has been significant progress toward identifying the individual membrane  transporters and unraveling their complex regulation. In the liver, bile acids  are efficiently transported across the sinusoidal membrane by the Na(+)  taurocholate cotransporting polypeptide with assistance by members of the organic  anion transporting polypeptide family. The bile acids are then secreted in an  ATP-dependent fashion across the canalicular membrane by the bile salt export  pump. Following their movement with bile into the lumen of the small intestine,  bile acids are almost quantitatively reclaimed in the ileum by the apical  sodium-dependent bile acid transporter. The bile acids are shuttled across the  enterocyte to the basolateral membrane and effluxed into the portal circulation  by the recently indentified heteromeric organic solute transporter,  OSTalpha-OSTbeta. In addition to the hepatocyte and enterocyte, subgroups of  these bile acid transporters are expressed by the biliary, renal, and colonic  epithelium where they contribute to maintaining bile acid homeostasis and play  important cytoprotective roles. This article will review our current  understanding of the physiological role and regulation of these important  carriers.|Animals[MESH]|Bile Acids and Salts/*metabolism[MESH]|Humans[MESH]|Membrane Transport Proteins/*metabolism[MESH]
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