Literature DB >> 22339151

A substrate pharmacophore for the human organic cation/carnitine transporter identifies compounds associated with rhabdomyolysis.

Sean Ekins1, Lei Diao, James E Polli.   

Abstract

The human organic cation/carnitine transporter (hOCTN2) is a high affinity cation/carnitine transporter expressed widely in human tissues and is physiologically important for the homeostasis of L-carnitine. The objective of this study was to elucidate the substrate requirements of this transporter via computational modeling based on published in vitro data. Nine published substrates of hOCTN2 were used to create a common feature pharmacophore that was validated by mapping other known OCTN2 substrates. The pharmacophore was used to search a drug database and retrieved molecules that were then used as search queries in PubMed for instances of a side effect (rhabdomyolysis) associated with interference with L-carnitine transport. The substrate pharmacophore was composed of two hydrogen bond acceptors, a positive ionizable feature and ten excluded volumes. The substrate pharmacophore also mapped 6 out of 7 known substrate molecules used as a test set. After searching a database of ~800 known drugs, thirty drugs were predicted to map to the substrate pharmacophore with L-carnitine shape restriction. At least 16 of these molecules had case reports documenting an association with rhabdomyolysis and represent a set for prioritizing for future testing as OCTN2 substrates or inhibitors. This computational OCTN2 substrate pharmacophore derived from published data partially overlaps a previous OCTN2 inhibitor pharmacophore and is also able to select compounds that demonstrate rhabdomyolysis, further confirming the possible linkage between this side effect and hOCTN2.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22339151      PMCID: PMC3319199          DOI: 10.1021/mp200438v

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Pharm        ISSN: 1543-8384            Impact factor:   4.939


  37 in total

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9.  Molecular and functional identification of sodium ion-dependent, high affinity human carnitine transporter OCTN2.

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Journal:  J Biol Chem       Date:  1998-08-07       Impact factor: 5.157

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Journal:  Nephron       Date:  1989       Impact factor: 2.847

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