Literature DB >> 15502009

The impact of P-glycoprotein on the disposition of drugs targeted for indications of the central nervous system: evaluation using the MDR1A/1B knockout mouse model.

Angela Doran1, R Scott Obach, Bill J Smith, Natilie A Hosea, Stacey Becker, Ernesto Callegari, Cuiping Chen, Xi Chen, Edna Choo, Julie Cianfrogna, Loretta M Cox, John P Gibbs, Megan A Gibbs, Heather Hatch, Cornelis E C A Hop, Ilana N Kasman, Jennifer Laperle, Jianhua Liu, Xingrong Liu, Michael Logman, Debra Maclin, Frank M Nedza, Frederick Nelson, Emily Olson, Sandhya Rahematpura, David Raunig, Sabrinia Rogers, Kari Schmidt, Douglas K Spracklin, Mark Szewc, Matthew Troutman, Elaine Tseng, Meihua Tu, Jeffrey W Van Deusen, Karthik Venkatakrishnan, Gary Walens, Ellen Q Wang, Diane Wong, Adam S Yasgar, Chenghong Zhang.   

Abstract

Thirty-two structurally diverse drugs used for the treatment of various conditions of the central nervous system (CNS), along with two active metabolites, and eight non-CNS drugs were measured in brain, plasma, and cerebrospinal fluid in the P-glycoprotein (P-gp) knockout mouse model after subcutaneous administration, and the data were compared with corresponding data obtained in wild-type mice. Total brain-to-plasma (B/P) ratios for the CNS agents ranged from 0.060 to 24. Of the 34 CNS-active agents, only 7 demonstrated B/P area under the plasma concentration curve ratios between P-gp knockout and wild-type mice that did not differ significantly from unity. Most of the remaining drugs demonstrated 1.1- to 2.6-fold greater B/P ratios in P-gp knockout mice versus wild-type mice. Three, risperidone, its active metabolite 9-hydroxyrisperidone, and metoclopramide, showed marked differences in B/P ratios between knockout and wild-type mice (6.6- to 17-fold). Differences in B/P ratios and cerebrospinal fluid/plasma ratios between wild-type and knockout animals were correlated. Through the use of this model, it appears that most CNS-active agents demonstrate at least some P-gp-mediated transport that can affect brain concentrations. However, the impact for the majority of agents is probably minor. The example of risperidone illustrates that even good P-gp substrates can still be clinically useful CNS-active agents. However, for such agents, unbound plasma concentrations may need to be greater than values projected using receptor affinity data to achieve adequate receptor occupancy for effect.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15502009     DOI: 10.1124/dmd.104.001230

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Drug Metab Dispos        ISSN: 0090-9556            Impact factor:   3.922


  100 in total

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