Inhibition of calcium phosphate precipitation by bile salts: a test of the Ca(2+)-buffering hypothesis.

The ability of bile salts to inhibit the precipitation of either calcium hydroxyapatite or its precursor, amorphous calcium phosphate, by reducing Ca2+ activity or poisoning nascent crystals was determined. When apatite precipitated rapidly (1-4 h), glycocholate and taurine-conjugated bile salts (up...

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Main Authors: R S Crowther, M Okido
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 1994-02-01
Series:Journal of Lipid Research
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022227520412179
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spelling doaj-4e9a34e3d75d4b9c814aad3441eff1c52021-04-26T05:52:10ZengElsevierJournal of Lipid Research0022-22751994-02-01352279290Inhibition of calcium phosphate precipitation by bile salts: a test of the Ca(2+)-buffering hypothesis.R S Crowther0M Okido1Department of Internal Medicine, University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston 77555.Department of Internal Medicine, University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston 77555.The ability of bile salts to inhibit the precipitation of either calcium hydroxyapatite or its precursor, amorphous calcium phosphate, by reducing Ca2+ activity or poisoning nascent crystals was determined. When apatite precipitated rapidly (1-4 h), glycocholate and taurine-conjugated bile salts (up to 100 mM) had little effect on apatite formation, but prevented amorphous calcium phosphate precipitation by lowering Ca2+ activity. In contrast, glycodeoxycholate and glycochenodeoxycholate (2-3 mM) inhibited apatite formation for at least 24 h by poisoning embryonic apatite. When apatite precipitated slowly (> 24 h), all the dihydroxy bile salts prevented apatite formation for at least 4 days. At constant initial supersaturation, the phosphate concentration determined the degree of inhibition caused by the six bile salts mixed together in physiologic proportion. At low phosphate concentrations (1.2 mM) total inhibition was achieved by poisoning embryos (approximately -5 mM total bile salt), but with 4.0 mM phosphate only approximately 60% inhibition was attained (150 mM bile salt) by a combination of poisoning and Ca(2+)-buffering. Thus, at low supersaturation all dihydroxy bile salts can prevent apatite formation by reducing free Ca2+ (taurine and glycine conjugates) or poisoning embryos (glycine conjugates). With mixtures of bile salts at higher supersaturation, inhibition of apatite depends on a combination of poisoning and reduction of free Ca2+, mainly caused by glycodeoxycholate and glycochenodeoxycholate.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022227520412179
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author R S Crowther
M Okido
spellingShingle R S Crowther
M Okido
Inhibition of calcium phosphate precipitation by bile salts: a test of the Ca(2+)-buffering hypothesis.
Journal of Lipid Research
author_facet R S Crowther
M Okido
author_sort R S Crowther
title Inhibition of calcium phosphate precipitation by bile salts: a test of the Ca(2+)-buffering hypothesis.
title_short Inhibition of calcium phosphate precipitation by bile salts: a test of the Ca(2+)-buffering hypothesis.
title_full Inhibition of calcium phosphate precipitation by bile salts: a test of the Ca(2+)-buffering hypothesis.
title_fullStr Inhibition of calcium phosphate precipitation by bile salts: a test of the Ca(2+)-buffering hypothesis.
title_full_unstemmed Inhibition of calcium phosphate precipitation by bile salts: a test of the Ca(2+)-buffering hypothesis.
title_sort inhibition of calcium phosphate precipitation by bile salts: a test of the ca(2+)-buffering hypothesis.
publisher Elsevier
series Journal of Lipid Research
issn 0022-2275
publishDate 1994-02-01
description The ability of bile salts to inhibit the precipitation of either calcium hydroxyapatite or its precursor, amorphous calcium phosphate, by reducing Ca2+ activity or poisoning nascent crystals was determined. When apatite precipitated rapidly (1-4 h), glycocholate and taurine-conjugated bile salts (up to 100 mM) had little effect on apatite formation, but prevented amorphous calcium phosphate precipitation by lowering Ca2+ activity. In contrast, glycodeoxycholate and glycochenodeoxycholate (2-3 mM) inhibited apatite formation for at least 24 h by poisoning embryonic apatite. When apatite precipitated slowly (> 24 h), all the dihydroxy bile salts prevented apatite formation for at least 4 days. At constant initial supersaturation, the phosphate concentration determined the degree of inhibition caused by the six bile salts mixed together in physiologic proportion. At low phosphate concentrations (1.2 mM) total inhibition was achieved by poisoning embryos (approximately -5 mM total bile salt), but with 4.0 mM phosphate only approximately 60% inhibition was attained (150 mM bile salt) by a combination of poisoning and Ca(2+)-buffering. Thus, at low supersaturation all dihydroxy bile salts can prevent apatite formation by reducing free Ca2+ (taurine and glycine conjugates) or poisoning embryos (glycine conjugates). With mixtures of bile salts at higher supersaturation, inhibition of apatite depends on a combination of poisoning and reduction of free Ca2+, mainly caused by glycodeoxycholate and glycochenodeoxycholate.
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022227520412179
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AT mokido inhibitionofcalciumphosphateprecipitationbybilesaltsatestoftheca2bufferinghypothesis
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