taurochenodeoxycholic-acid and 7-ketolithocholic-acid

taurochenodeoxycholic-acid has been researched along with 7-ketolithocholic-acid* in 2 studies

Other Studies

2 other study(ies) available for taurochenodeoxycholic-acid and 7-ketolithocholic-acid

ArticleYear
Laser light scattering evidence for a common wormlike growth structure of mixed micelles in bile salt- and straight-chain detergent-phosphatidylcholine aqueous systems: relevance to the micellar structure of bile.
    Biochemistry, 1998, Oct-20, Volume: 37, Issue:42

    We employed quasielastic and static light scattering to measure apparent values of the mean hydrodynamic radii (Rh)app, molecular weights (Mapp), and radii of gyration (Rg)app in solutions containing mixed micelles composed of bile salts (cholate and taurochenodeoxycholate, both cholanoyl derivatives) and the glycoacyl chain detergent, octyl glucoside, with egg yolk phosphatidylcholine (EYPC) as functions of total lipid concentration (0.1-10 g/dL), EYPC/detergent molar ratio (0-1.2), and ionic strength (0.15-0.4 M NaCl) at 20 degreesC and 1 atm. As the mixed micellar phase boundaries were approached by dilution, (Rh)app, Mapp, and (Rg)app values increased markedly by up to 20-fold. For each micellar system, the scaling ratios (Rh)app/Mapp1/2 and (Rg)app/(Rh)app remained essentially constant at 0.018 nm/(g/mol)1/2 and 1.5 (dimensionless), respectively, despite large variations in total lipid concentration, detergent molecular species, and ionic strength. Refined data analysis is inconsistent with a flat "mixed-disc" model for bile salt-EYPC micelles [Mazer, N. A., Benedek, G. B., and Carey, M. C. (1980) Biochemistry 19, 601] and octyl glucoside-EYPC micelles principally because the numerical value of (Rh)app/Mapp1/2 corresponds to a hypothetical disk thickness of approximately 1 nm, which is 4-fold smaller than the bimolecular width of EYPC molecules, and for a disk, (Rg)app/(Rh)app ratios should be close to 1 at low total lipid concentrations. Assuming disc-shaped micelles, we show that intermicellar excluded volume interactions would have only a minor effect on Mapp and cannot account for the unrealistic disk thickness. Instead, locally cylindrical, semiflexible wormlike micelles of diameter d = 4 nm and persistence length xip = 17 nm in solution are compatible with the observed (Rh)app/Mapp1/2 and (Rg)app/(Rh)app values when intermicellar excluded-volume interactions are considered. With EYPC/taurochenodeoxycholate = 0.6 and EYPC/cholate = 1.0 in 0.15 M NaCl, independent micelles grow upon dilution and use of the second virial coefficient [Egelhaaf, S. U., and Schurtenberger, P. (1994) J. Phys. Chem. 98, 8560] is adequate for estimating micellar weights. The systems EYPC/cholate = 1.0 in 0.4 M NaCl, EYPC/cholate = 1.2 in 0.15 M NaCl, and EYPC/octyl glucoside = 0.13 in 0.15 M NaCl all form highly overlapping, semidilute polymer solutions, which mimic the observed scaling ratios. In such semidilute systems, use of the second virial coefficient alone to ac

    Topics: Bile; Bile Acids and Salts; Crystallization; Detergents; Egg Yolk; Lasers; Lithocholic Acid; Micelles; Models, Molecular; Phosphatidylcholines; Scattering, Radiation; Solutions; Taurochenodeoxycholic Acid

1998
Side chain conjugation prevents bacterial 7-dehydroxylation of bile acids.
    The Journal of biological chemistry, 1990, Jul-05, Volume: 265, Issue:19

    The effect of side chain conjugation on 7-dehydroxylation of bile acids has been investigated. C24-bile acids and their glycine and taurine conjugates and keto bile acids were incubated with pure strains of Eubacterium sp. VPI 12708. Bile acids of the 5 alpha- or 5 beta-series with a free terminal carboxyl group and a 3 alpha, 7 alpha-dihydroxy system were very effectively 7 alpha-dehydroxylated, whereas 7 beta-hydroxy bile acids resisted 7-dehydroxylation. Oxo bile acids were metabolized at the oxygen function also. Glycine- and taurine-conjugated bile acids were neither deamidated nor 7-dehydroxylated by the bacteria. Thus, side chain conjugation prevents 7-dehydroxylation of bile acids by Eubacterium sp. VPI 12708.

    Topics: Bile Acids and Salts; Eubacterium; Glycine; Glycochenodeoxycholic Acid; Glycocholic Acid; Hydroxysteroid Dehydrogenases; Lithocholic Acid; Oxidoreductases; Steroid Hydroxylases; Structure-Activity Relationship; Substrate Specificity; Taurine; Taurochenodeoxycholic Acid; Taurocholic Acid

1990