コーパス検索結果 (1語後でソート)
通し番号をクリックするとPubMedの該当ページを表示します
1 abolism (glucose), and liver function (total bile acids).
2 ked by gut microbiome-mediated hydrolysis of bile acids.
3 crucial for the enterohepatic circulation of bile acids.
4 of inflammation, fatty acid metabolism, and bile acids.
5 chia, and Enterococcus and increased primary bile acids.
6 in mice with liver injuries and dysregulated bile acids.
7 bolites and enabled the detection of certain bile acids.
8 cholesterol, generating steroid hormones or bile acids.
9 ss people are associated with differences in bile acids.
10 n biomarkers HDL and ApoA1, as well as total bile acids.
11 hesis and, in particular, decreases in toxic bile acids.
12 cycle, tocopherol, polyamine metabolism, and bile acids.
13 ophobic interactions between polyphenols and bile acids.
15 ajor components of the recirculating pool of bile acids(4); the size and composition of this pool are
16 o accommodate the amphipathic cholic core of bile acids, a fingerprint of key residues to recognize d
17 ndent transporter, plays the leading role of bile acid absorption into enterocytes, where bile acids
18 that, besides facilitating lipid absorption, bile acids act as signaling molecules that modulate gluc
21 ation of the host innate immune response via bile acid-activated receptors FXR and TGR5 represents a
22 ecal and colonic inflammatory transcriptome, bile acid-activated receptors nuclear farnesoid X recept
23 ember of the nuclear receptor superfamily of bile acid-activated transcription factors and an importa
26 insulin sensitivity, suggesting that raised bile acids affect beta-cell mass but are insufficient to
27 levels of 7alpha-hydroxy-4-cholesten-3-one, bile acids, alanine and aspartate aminotransferases, and
29 esigned to integrate sensors that respond to bile acid and anhydrotetracycline (aTc), including one c
30 a well-known transcriptional corepressor of bile acid and lipid metabolism in the liver; however, it
32 ed with glycine betaine and L-carnitine, and bile acid and tryptophan metabolism are associated with
33 ombinant mouse Nape-pld to screen a panel of bile acids and a library of experimental compounds (the
35 nse during acute GvHD might be influenced by bile acids and by the decreased production of AhR ligand
36 both transport endogenous substrates such as bile acids and hormone conjugates as well as numerous dr
37 he relative abundance of cholic-acid-derived bile acids and induces physiologically relevant shifts i
38 el for bacterial enterotoxins and endotoxin, bile acids and interaction with the pharmaceutical drugs
39 oss-membrane signalling of a vast variety of bile acids and is a signalling hub in the liver-bile aci
40 tatins abolish the insulinotropic effects of bile acids and on the other hand, FXR determines the lev
44 ngs thus establish an etiologic link between bile acids and PTB, and open an avenue for developing et
47 , alpha diversity, and pyrimidine, secondary bile acid, and neuroactive glucocorticoid/pregnanolone-t
48 n (aromatic compounds, secondary or sulfated bile acids, and benzoate) and estrogen metabolites, as w
50 fatty acids, converting primary to secondary bile acids, and facilitating colonization resistance aga
53 ostridia), metabolite pools (acylcarnitines, bile acids, and short-chain fatty acids), and levels of
56 bile acid absorption into enterocytes, where bile acids are delivered to basolateral side by ileal bi
64 P), a disorder characterised by raised serum bile acids, are at increased risk of developing gestatio
67 along the gut-liver axis acts as a sensor of bile acid availability to restrain liver size and tumori
68 onal cholesterol absorption, cholesterol and bile acid (BA) levels, and composition of BAs were measu
70 tirome (GC-1), are known to impact lipid and bile acid (BA) metabolism and induce hepatocyte prolifer
71 echanisms by which alterations in intestinal bile acid (BA) metabolism improve systemic glucose toler
75 s suppression was recently shown to decrease bile acid (BA) synthesis, thus preventing the developmen
89 on disorder resulting from increased loss of bile acids (BAs), overlapping irritable bowel syndrome w
91 acid uptake by ASBT, and the development of bile acid-based oral drug delivery for ASBT-targeting, i
92 drug delivery for ASBT-targeting, including bile acid-based prodrugs, bile acid/drug electrostatic c
93 h intrahepatic cholestasis of pregnancy have bile acids below this concentration, they can probably b
94 s are delivered to basolateral side by ileal bile acid binding protein (IBABP) and then released by o
95 s in the orthosteric site, a putative second bile acid-binding site with allosteric properties and st
96 tion scores of 3 metabolic pathways, primary bile acid biosynthesis, fatty acid biosynthesis, and bio
98 mportantly, aberrant systemic circulation of bile acids can greatly disrupt metabolic homeostasis.
102 ith changes in the microbiota population and bile acid composition, including reversing microbiota co
104 lipolysis and lipotoxic injury, CEL required bile acid concentrations higher than in human fat necros
106 sed by maternal pruritus and increased serum bile acid concentrations, is associated with increased r
107 egnancy and singleton pregnancies when serum bile acids concentrations are of 100 mumol/L or more.
113 noclostridium, higher microbial capacity for bile acid conversion, and low abundance of some species
114 d intestinal microbiota of pregnancy enhance bile acid deconjugation, reducing ileal bile acid uptake
115 m gamma-glutamyltransferase, C4, and primary bile acids decreased significantly at week 24 in both ci
117 e microbial metabolic byproduct of secondary bile acid deoxycholic acid (DCA), at as low as 50 uM, in
118 ns, or its derived metabolite, the secondary bile acid deoxycholic acid, can restore pDC- and MyD88-d
119 most abundant metabolites are the secondary bile acids deoxycholic acid (DCA) and lithocholic acid (
122 both plasma and adipose tissue, such as the bile acid derivative deoxycholic acid and the microbiome
123 high-affinity P395(4) or the semisynthesized bile acid derivative INT-777(1,3) at 3 angstrom resoluti
124 urrently no approved therapies for NASH, the bile acid-derived FXR agonist obeticholic acid (OCA; 6-e
126 erologic tests for celiac disease, tests for bile acid diarrhea, the commercially available version o
130 rgeting, including bile acid-based prodrugs, bile acid/drug electrostatic complexation and bile acid-
131 salt hydrolase activity, which deconjugates bile acids enabling secondary modification to FXR agonis
133 am regulatory factor analysis implicated the bile acid/farnesoid X receptor in some of these processe
136 e screened the major species of deconjugated bile acids for their ability to potentiate the different
137 we inferred elevated production of secondary bile acids from CRC metagenomes, suggesting a metabolic
139 of tropifexor (LJN452), the most potent non-bile acid FXR agonist currently in clinical investigatio
140 discovery of a novel chemical series of non-bile acid FXR agonists based on a tricyclic dihydrochrom
141 imed to investigate the role of raised serum bile acids, FXR and TGR5 in gestational glucose metaboli
143 xenobiotic metabolism (e.g., Cyp1a4), lipid/bile acid homeostasis (e.g., Lbfabp), and oxidative stre
144 Potential mechanisms include disruption of bile acid homeostasis and reduction in the production of
148 as a major prosecretory mechanism of CDCA, a bile acid implicated in BAD, and support the potential t
149 lanced levels of short-chain fatty acids and bile acids, improved gut barrier integrity and increased
150 thermore, the specific transport pathways of bile acid in enterocytes are described and the recent fi
153 icile Here we describe a role for intestinal bile acids in directly binding and neutralizing TcdB tox
155 d phenolic compounds in urine (UHPLC-MS/MS), bile acids in feces (UHPLC-QTOF), gastrointestinal condi
157 t can reduce itch and lower endogenous serum bile acids in intrahepatic cholestasis of pregnancy (ICP
159 examine the implications of lower levels of bile acids in MS, we studied the in vitro effects of an
161 d the overall intracellular concentration of bile acids in primary human hepatocytes grown in sandwic
162 s are orally administered polymers that bind bile acids in the intestine, forming nonabsorbable compl
163 conditions characterized by accumulation of bile acids in the liver that actively contribute to live
164 strate that cholestasis, the accumulation of bile acids in the liver, fails to promote liver injury i
165 erprint of key residues to recognize diverse bile acids in the orthosteric site, a putative second bi
167 promoting TFEB nuclear translocation, while bile acid-induced fibroblast growth factor 19 (FGF19), a
168 Factor-15/19 (mouse FGF15, human FGF19) are bile acid-induced late fed-state gut hormones that decre
179 to a combination of the effects of increased bile acids, maternal dyslipidemia and deranged maternal
182 neurotensin (NT)] and on glucose, lipid, and bile acid metabolism in RYGB-operated and unoperated ind
184 ng microbiome properties or restoring normal bile acid metabolism may prevent or slow the progression
185 t inflammation/permeability and dysregulated bile acid metabolism observed in opioid-exposed mice.
187 fecal microbiota, assessed the expression of bile acid metabolism regulators and examined the immunop
189 ddition, metabolites associated with hepatic bile acid metabolism were affected by oil exposure which
190 factors, including a defective gut barrier, bile acid metabolism, antibiotic use, and the pleiotropi
192 ry to loss of canalicular bile transport and bile acid metabolism, leading to intrahepatic bile accum
193 FGF15 activates Hippo signaling to suppress bile acid metabolism, liver overgrowth, and tumorigenesi
194 rylation, fatty acid metabolism, peroxisome, bile acid metabolism, xenobiotic metabolism, and adipoge
201 g, we identified lower levels of circulating bile acid metabolites in multiple cohorts of adult and p
203 l resulted in significant alterations in the bile acid metabolome with little to no changes in gut mi
204 integrated analysis of gut microbiome, serum bile acid metabolome, imaging, and histological measurem
206 tubulo-toxic factors, such as endotoxins and bile acids, might mediate parenchymal renal injury in pa
207 high-throughput screen designed to identify bile acid mimetics we uncovered nonsteroidal small molec
211 The dysregulation of IL-23 pathways and bile acid pathways may be key to the development of WD-a
212 y bile acids (SBAs) are derived from primary bile acids (PBAs) in a process reliant on biosynthetic c
213 aviruses within hours of infection through a bile acid-pDC-IFN signaling axis, which affects viremia,
214 s a G protein-coupled receptor for secondary bile acids placed at the interface between liver sinusoi
215 ed "enterohepatic recycling", only 5% of the bile acid pool (~3 g in human) is excreted in feces, ind
216 1 mRNA and protein in DKO mice and increased bile acid pool size, while cholic acid also induced Cyp7
219 red that lithocholic acid (LCA), a secondary bile acid prevalent in the cecum and colon of mice and h
222 de a comprehensive analysis of how secondary bile acids produced by unique members of the microbiota
233 bolic effects of the deficiency of these two bile acid receptors on hepatic metabolism and injury in
235 distinct regional expression profiles of key bile acid receptors that regulate the type III interfero
236 te dehydrogenase and elevating enterohepatic bile acid recirculation are promising new approaches for
237 mitochondrial respiration and enterohepatic bile acid recirculation due to improvement of endoplasmi
238 tein levels, thereby promoting enterohepatic bile acid recirculation, leading to activation of bile a
239 tural features of GPBAR that are involved in bile acid recognition and allosteric effects, but also s
240 d transcription factor that, upon binding of bile acids, regulates the expression of genes involved i
243 acid recirculation, leading to activation of bile acid-responsive genes in the intestinal ileum to au
244 e show that individual primary and secondary bile acids reversibly bind and inhibit TcdB to varying d
246 hocholic acid (P = 0.01) and total secondary bile acid (SBA) concentrations (P = 0.04) than the oleic
251 aluate the efficacy and safety of IW-3718, a bile acid sequestrant, as an adjunct to PPI therapy.
256 d, we were able to identify dysregulation of bile acids, short-chain fatty acids, and cholesterol der
257 in and streptomycin markedly altered hepatic bile acid signaling and lipid metabolism, while ceftriax
258 of a variety of endogenous compounds such as bile acids, steroids, and fat-soluble vitamins, as well
260 e acid metabolism was altered in MS and that bile acid supplementation prevented polarization of astr
261 log of fibroblast growth factor 19, inhibits bile acid synthesis and regulates metabolic homeostasis.
262 nabled by aldafermin-mediated suppression of bile acid synthesis and, in particular, decreases in tox
265 deficiency alters cholesterol metabolism and bile acid synthesis, conjugation, and transport, resulti
266 reased levels of LDH as well as reduction in bile acid synthesis-results that were consistent with he
271 s and stabilizes SHP to downregulate the key bile acid-synthesis enzyme Cyp7a1 expression, thereby li
272 tudied the in vitro effects of an endogenous bile acid, tauroursodeoxycholic acid (TUDCA), on astrocy
275 ic acid (p < 0.0001), with more unconjugated bile acids than women with untreated ICP or uncomplicate
277 tified a series of noncanonical, unsaturated bile acids that were depleted in patients with CDI.
278 included the amino acid conjugations of host bile acids that were used to produce phenylalanocholic a
279 (ICP) causes increased transfer of maternal bile acids to the fetus and an increased incidence of su
281 fetus in ICP by inhibiting OATP4A1-mediated bile acid transfer and TC-induced placental vasoconstric
283 estinal bile acid uptake by an apical sodium-bile acid transporter (ASBT) inhibitor decreases ileal F
288 As mithramycin affects cellular response to bile acid treatment by altering the expression of multip
289 n paid to short-chain fatty acids, secondary bile acids, trimethylamine N-oxide, and phenylacetylglut
290 ance bile acid deconjugation, reducing ileal bile acid uptake and lowering FXR induction in enterocyt
292 patic recycling, especially the mechanism of bile acid uptake by ASBT, and the development of bile ac
294 study ENaC, we found that, depending on the bile acid used, bile acids both activate and inhibit mou
297 singly negatively charged phospholipids and bile acids were calibrated in nitrogen buffer gas using
299 pitomized by the bacterial transformation of bile acids, which creates a complex pool of steroids(8)
300 th a 1,000-fold reduction in serum secondary bile acids, which was highly correlated with AP-1/NR4A s