Bilirubin is a yellow breakdown product of normal heme catabolism. Its levels are elevated in certain diseases and it is responsible for the yellow color of bruises.
Physiology and metabolism
Bilirubin is formed when
red blood cells die and their hemoglobin is broken down within the
macrophages to heme and globins. The heme is further degraded to Fe
2+,
carbon monoxide and bilirubin via the intermediate compound
biliverdin. Since bilirubin is poorly
soluble in
water, it is carried to the
liver and bound to
albumin. Bilirubin is made water-soluble in the liver by
conjugation with
glucuronic acid. Conjugated bilirubin, or bilirubinglucuronide, moves into the bile canaliculi of the liver and then to the
gall bladder. When stimulated by eating, bile (including the conjugated bilirubin) is excreted into the small intestine. In the later portions of the
small intestine (ileum) and the
colon, about half of the bilirubinglucuronide is converted into urobilinogen. Urobilinogen is either reabsorbed or converted by the presence of oxygen to stercobilin. The stercobilin and remaining bilirubinglucuronide are excreted in the feces. These two metabolites of bilirubin are what give feces their characteristic brown color. Small amounts of urobilinogen remaining in the blood are filtered by the kidneys, ending up in the urine as
urobilin. This bilirubin metabolite gives urine its characteristic yellow color.
In diseases where too much hemoglobin is broken down or the removal of bilirubin does not function properly, the accumulating bilirubin in the body causes jaundice.
Bilirubin blood tests
Bilirubin is broken down by light, and blood collection tubes (especially serum tubes) should therefore be protected from such exposure.
Bilirubin is found in blood either in the soluble form, conjugated bilirubin (also direct bilirubin), or bound to albumin form unconjugated bilirubin (also indirect bilirubin). The terms "direct" and "indirect" refer to the fact that soluble bilirubin can be measured directly, whereas insoluble, or indirect, bilirubin must be solubilised before measurement.
Although both direct and indirect bilirubin can be measured separately, it is more common to measure just total bilirubin. To further elucidate the causes of jaundice or increased bilirubin, it is usually simpler to look at other liver function tests (especially the enzymes ALT, AST, GGT, Alk Phos), blood film examination (hemolysis, etc.) or evidence of infective hepatitis (e.g., Hepatitis A, B, C, delta E, etc).
Bilirubin is an excretion product, and the body does not control levels. Bilirubin levels reflect the balance between production and excretion. Thus, there is no "normal" level of bilirubin.
Interpretation
The
reference range for total bilirubin is 2 - 14 μmol/L or 0.3 - 1.9 mg/dL. For direct bilirubin, it is 0 - 4 μmol/L or 0 - 0.3 mg/dL.
Mild rises in bilirubin may be caused by
- Hemolysis or increased breakdown of blood.
- Gilbert's syndrome - a genetic disorder of bilirubin metabolism which can result in mild jaundice, found in about 5% of the population.
Moderate rise in bilirubin may be caused by
Very high levels of bilirubin may be caused by
Cirrhosis may cause normal, moderately high or high levels of bilirubin, depending on exact features of the cirrhosis.
Jaundice
Jaundice may be noticeable in the
sclera (white) of the eyes at levels above about 30-50 μmol/l, and in the skin at higher levels. Jaundice is classified depending upon whether the bilirubin is free or conjugated to
glucuronic acid into:
- Conjugated jaundice
- Unconjugated jaundice
Bilirubin toxicity
Unconjugated hyperbilirubinaemia in the neonate can lead to accumulation of bilirubin in certain brain regions, a phenomenon known as
kernicterus, with consequent irreversible damage to these areas manifesting as various neurological deficits,
seizures, abnormal
reflexes and eye movements. Aside from specific chronic medical conditions that may lead to hyperbilirubinaemia, neonates in general are at increased risk since they lack the intestinal bacteria that facilitate the breakdown and excretion of conjugated billirubin in the feces (this is largely why the feces of a neonate are paler than those of an adult). Instead the conjugated billirubin is converted back into the unconjugated form by the enzyme
b-glucoronidase and a large proportion is reabsorbed through the
enterohepatic circulation.
Bilirubin benefits
Reasonable levels of bilirubin can be beneficial to the organism. Evidence is accumulating that suggests bilirubin can protect tissues against oxidative damage caused by
free radicals and other
reactive oxygen species.
Chemistry
Bilirubin consists of an open chain of four
pyrroles (
tetrapyrrole);
by contrast, the heme molecule is a
ring of four pyrroles, called
porphyrin.
Bilirubin is very similar to the pigment phycobilin used by certain algae to capture light energy, and to the pigment phytochrome used by plants to sense light. All of these contain an open chain of four pyrroles.
Like these other pigments, bilirubin changes its conformation when exposed to light. This is used in the phototherapy of jaundiced newborns: the illuminated version of bilirubin is more soluble than the unilluminated version.
Several textbooks and research articles show incorrect chemical structures for the two isoforms of bilirubin. *
Trivia
Bilirubin was used as a wordplay in
Silence of the Lambs, Lecter gives the name of the killer as Billy Rubin; after he escaped a sheet of paper with the formula for bilirubin is found in his cell.
See also
Chemical pathology | Metabolism | Pigments | Tetrapyrroles | Hepatology
Bilirubin | Bilirubina | בילירובין | Bilirubinas | Bilirubine | ビリルビン | Bilirubina | Bilirrubina | Bilirubín | Bilirubin | Bilirubiini | Bilirubin