| Literature DB >> 24023511 |
Abstract
P-glycoprotein (P-gp), an efflux membrane transporter, is widely distributed throughout the body and is responsible for limiting cellular uptake and the distribution of xenobiotics and toxic substances. Hundreds of structurally diverse therapeutic agents are substrates to it and it impedes the absorption, permeability, and retention of the drugs, extruding them out of the cells. It is overexpressed in cancer cells and accountable for obstructing cell internalization of chemotherapeutic agents and for developing transporter mediated resistance by cancer cells during anti-tumor treatments. As it jeopardizes the success of drug delivery and cancer targeting, strategies are being developed to overcome P-gp mediated drug transport. This concise review represents a brief discussion on P-gp mediated drug transport and how it hinders the success of various therapies. Its main focus is on various strategies used to tackle this curb in the field of drug delivery and targeting.Entities:
Keywords: P-glycoprotein; P-glycoprotein inhibitor; bioavailability; drug delivery; drug efflux; drug resistance
Year: 2013 PMID: 24023511 PMCID: PMC3762612 DOI: 10.4137/DTI.S12519
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Drug Target Insights ISSN: 1177-3928
Figure 1Drug efflux by P-glycoprotein.
Figure 2Inhibition of P-glycoprotein to prevent drug efflux.
Classification of P-gp inhibitors.1,20,23,25–27
| Generations | Examples | Specificity | Limitations |
|---|---|---|---|
| First generation | Verapamil, cyclosporin A, reserpine, quinidine, yohimbine, tamoxifen and toremifena | Non-selective and low binding affinities. | They are substrates to other transporters and enzyme systems. They are pharmacologically active. They themselves are transported by P-gp. |
| Second generation | Dexverapamil, dexniguldipine, valspodar (PSC 833), and Dofequidar fumarate (MS-209) | Higher specificity then first generation inhibitors but interact with other systems. | They are substrates to CYP 3A4 enzyme and other ABC transporters. |
| Third generation | Cyclopropyldibenzosuberane zosuquidar (LY335979), laniquidar (R101933), mitotane (NSC-38721), biricodar (VX-710), elacridar (GF120918/GG918), ONT-093, tariquidar (XR9576), and HM30181 | Highest specificity that specifically and potently inhibit P-gp function. | No limitations like the first and the second generation inhibitors. |