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    In mammals, the only endogenous pathway for choline biosynthesis is the methylation of phosphatidylethanolamine to phosphatidylcholine (PC) by phosphatidylethanolamine N-methyltransferase (PEMT) coupled to PC degradation. Complete choline deprivation in mice by feeding Pemt(-/-) mice a choline-deficient (CD) diet decreases hepatic PC by 50% and is lethal within 5 days. PC secretion into bile is mediated by a PC-specific flippase, multiple drug-resistant protein 2 (MDR2). Here, we report that mice that lack both PEMT and MDR2 and are fed a CD diet survive for >90 days. Unexpectedly, the amount of PC also decreases by 50% in the livers of Mdr2(-/-)/Pemt(-/-) mice. The Mdr2(-/-)/Pemt(-/-) mice adapt to the severe choline deprivation via choline recycling by induction of phospholipase A(2), choline kinase, and CTP:phosphocholine cytidylyltransferase activities and by a strikingly decreased expression of choline oxidase. The ability of Mdr2(-/-)/Pemt(-/-) mice to survive complete choline deprivation suggests that acute lethality in CD-Pemt(-/-) mice results from rapid depletion of hepatic PC via biliary secretion.

    Citation

    Zhaoyu Li, Luis B Agellon, Dennis E Vance. Phosphatidylcholine homeostasis and liver failure. The Journal of biological chemistry. 2005 Nov 11;280(45):37798-802

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    PMID: 16144842

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