» Articles » PMID: 11181899

In Vitro Substrate Identification Studies for P-glycoprotein-mediated Transport: Species Difference and Predictability of in Vivo Results

Overview
Specialty Pharmacology
Date 2001 Feb 22
PMID 11181899
Citations 47
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Two different cellular assay models were assessed as in vitro systems for P-glycoprotein (P-gp) substrate identification: cellular accumulation studies with KB-V1, a human MDR1 P-gp-overexpressing multidrug-resistant human epidermoid carcinoma cell line; and transcellular transport studies with L-MDR1 (or L-mdr1a), a human MDR1 (or mouse mdr1a)-transfected porcine renal epithelial cell line. The in vitro-in vivo correlation for P-gp-mediated transport activity was also examined by comparing in vitro data obtained from L-mdr1a cell studies and in vivo data from mdr1a (-/-)/(+/+) CF-1 mice studies for several compounds. The results are summarized as follows: 1) two in vitro assay systems routinely identified the substrate for human MDR1 P-gp-mediated transport with similar quantitative results; 2) in vitro studies with L-MDR1 and L-mdr1a cells demonstrated that the P-gp substrate susceptibility is different between human and mouse for certain compounds (species difference); and 3) in vivo brain concentration ratios of mdr1a (-/-) to (+/+) CF-1 mice, either at a certain time point or up to 60 min, correlated well with the in vitro transcellular transport ratios from L-mdr1a cells (r(2) = 0.968 and 0.926, respectively). This indicates that, at least in mice, the in vitro data are valid predictors of the in vivo contribution of P-gp: the contribution of P-gp to the distribution of the compound to the brain up to 60 min post i.v. administration. These results provide a rationale for predicting in vivo relevance of P-gp in human from in vitro data using human P-gp-expressing cells.

Citing Articles

Applicability of MDR1 Overexpressing Abcb1KO-MDCKII Cell Lines for Investigating In Vitro Species Differences and Brain Penetration Prediction.

Soskuti E, Szilvasy N, Temesszentandrasi-Ambrus C, Urban Z, Csikvari O, Szabo Z Pharmaceutics. 2024; 16(6).

PMID: 38931858 PMC: 11207571. DOI: 10.3390/pharmaceutics16060736.


Sex and the Kidney Drug-Metabolizing Enzymes and Transporters: Are Preclinical Drug Disposition Data Translatable to Humans?.

Thakur A, Yue G, Ahire D, Mettu V, Al Maghribi A, Ford K Clin Pharmacol Ther. 2024; 116(1):235-246.

PMID: 38711199 PMC: 11218045. DOI: 10.1002/cpt.3277.


Probiotic-derived ferrichrome induces DDIT3-mediated antitumor effects in esophageal cancer cells.

Kunogi T, Konishi H, Sakatani A, Moriichi K, Yamamura C, Yamamoto K Heliyon. 2024; 10(6):e28070.

PMID: 38545201 PMC: 10966684. DOI: 10.1016/j.heliyon.2024.e28070.


Model of P-Glycoprotein Ligand Binding and Validation with Efflux Substrate Matched Pairs.

Conrad J, Paras N, Vaz R J Med Chem. 2024; 67(7):5854-5865.

PMID: 38544305 PMC: 11017244. DOI: 10.1021/acs.jmedchem.4c00139.


Mechanisms and implications in gene polymorphism mediated diverse reponses to sedatives, analgesics and muscle relaxants.

Sun Y, Zhu H, Esmaeili E, Tang X, Wu Z Korean J Anesthesiol. 2023; 76(2):89-98.

PMID: 36935389 PMC: 10078998. DOI: 10.4097/kja.22654.