Human liver contains two forms of lithocholic acid. One form is readily extractable by 95% ethanol/0.1% ammonia (soluble lithocholate, SL), while the other remains firmly bound to the residue (tissue-bound lithocholate, TBL). TBL could be hydrolytically released using clostridial cholanoylamino acid hydrolase, suggesting a peptide link between lithocholate and protein. With bovine serum albumin (BSA), lithocholic acid showed spontaneous amino group-modifying activity. When small molecular weight lysine (alpha-t-BOC-1-lysyl-beta-naphthylamide) and arginine peptides (alpha-CBZ-di-arginyl-beta-naphthylamide) were used in place of BSA, lithocholate bound specifically to the lysine peptide. The unusual affinity for lysine suggested that this amino acid might be involved as a residue in TBL. Synthesis of lithocholyl lysines and comparison with products of acid hydrolysis of TBL established epsilon-lithocholyl lysine as the predominant form in which lithocholic acid is found in tissue bound form.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF02533857 | DOI Listing |
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