Item does not contain fulltextCholestasis, a hallmark feature of hepatobiliary disease, is characterized by the retention of biliary constituents. Some of these constituents, such as bile acids, inflict damage to hepatocytes and bile duct cells. This damage may lead to inflammation, fibrosis, cirrhosis, and eventually carcinogenesis, sequelae that aggravate the underlying disease and deteriorate clinical outcome. Canalicular ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporters, which mediate the excretion of individual bile constituents, play a key role in bile formation and cholestasis. The study of these transporters and their regulatory nuclear receptors has revolutionized our understanding of cholestatic disease. This knowledge has served as a templ...
Bile formation is one of the key functions of liver. Hepatocytes are the major cell type in liver an...
International audienceThe bile salt export pump (BSEP), encoded by the abcb11 gene, is the major can...
Generation of bile flow is a regulated, ATP-dependent process and depends on the coordinated action ...
Cholestasis, a hallmark feature of hepatobiliary disease, is characterized by the retention of bilia...
ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporters located in the hepatocyte canalicular membrane of mammalian ...
International audienceThe ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporters expressed at the canalicular membr...
The transport of bile salts, organic anions and cations, bilirubin and other substances from the por...
Bile acids (BA) are key molecules in generating bile flow, which is an essential function of the liv...
AbstractHepatic uptake and biliary excretion of organic anions (e.g., bile acids and bilirubin) is m...
Hepatobiliary transport of endogenous and exogenous compounds is mediated by the coordinated action ...
Bile formation is an important physiological process, coordinated by the concerted activity of trans...
Hepatobiliary transport of endogenous and exogenous compounds is mediated by the coordinated action ...
In vertebrates, bile flow is essential for movement of water and solutes across the liver canalicula...
The work described in this thesis deals with the role of nuclear receptors in transcriptional contro...
Bile formation is one of the key functions of liver. Hepatocytes are the major cell type in liver an...
International audienceThe bile salt export pump (BSEP), encoded by the abcb11 gene, is the major can...
Generation of bile flow is a regulated, ATP-dependent process and depends on the coordinated action ...
Cholestasis, a hallmark feature of hepatobiliary disease, is characterized by the retention of bilia...
ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporters located in the hepatocyte canalicular membrane of mammalian ...
International audienceThe ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporters expressed at the canalicular membr...
The transport of bile salts, organic anions and cations, bilirubin and other substances from the por...
Bile acids (BA) are key molecules in generating bile flow, which is an essential function of the liv...
AbstractHepatic uptake and biliary excretion of organic anions (e.g., bile acids and bilirubin) is m...
Hepatobiliary transport of endogenous and exogenous compounds is mediated by the coordinated action ...
Bile formation is an important physiological process, coordinated by the concerted activity of trans...
Hepatobiliary transport of endogenous and exogenous compounds is mediated by the coordinated action ...
In vertebrates, bile flow is essential for movement of water and solutes across the liver canalicula...
The work described in this thesis deals with the role of nuclear receptors in transcriptional contro...
Bile formation is one of the key functions of liver. Hepatocytes are the major cell type in liver an...
International audienceThe bile salt export pump (BSEP), encoded by the abcb11 gene, is the major can...
Generation of bile flow is a regulated, ATP-dependent process and depends on the coordinated action ...