Abstract: | The hepatic biosynthesis of bile salts in the rat has been shown to be controlled homeostatically by the quantity of bile salt returning to the liver via the portal circulation. The feedback mechanism was demonstrated in two kinds of experiments. In the first, rats with bile fistulas were infused intraduodenally with sodium taurocholate 12 hr after surgery. If the rate of infusion was greater than 10 mg per 100 g rat per hr, the increase in bile acid output normally observed in bile fistula rats was prevented. In the second type of experiment, the rats were infused with taurocholate 48-72 hr after biliary diversion, when bile acid output had reached a maximal value. Provided the rate of infusion exceeded 10 mg per 100 g rat per hr, bile acid secretion returned to the low levels observed in intact rats. Previous attempts to demonstrate the feedback control have been unsuccessful because too little bile salt was infused. The taurocholate pool of the experimental animals was measured as approximately 15 mg per 100 g rat; it was calculated from this and the above results that this pool circulated 10-13 times daily. |