| Literature DB >> 26410689 |
Miriam G Mooij1, Anne T Nies2,3, Catherijne A J Knibbe4,5, Elke Schaeffeler2,3, Dick Tibboel1, Matthias Schwab2,6, Saskia N de Wildt7.
Abstract
Membrane transporters play an essential role in the transport of endogenous and exogenous compounds, and consequently they mediate the uptake, distribution, and excretion of many drugs. The clinical relevance of transporters in drug disposition and their effect in adults have been shown in drug-drug interaction and pharmacogenomic studies. Little is known, however, about the ontogeny of human membrane transporters and their roles in pediatric pharmacotherapy. As they are involved in the transport of endogenous substrates, growth and development may be important determinants of their expression and activity. This review presents an overview of our current knowledge on human membrane transporters in pediatric drug disposition and effect. Existing pharmacokinetic and pharmacogenetic data on membrane substrate drugs frequently used in children are presented and related, where possible, to existing ex vivo data, providing a basis for developmental patterns for individual human membrane transporters. As data for individual transporters are currently still scarce, there is a striking information gap regarding the role of human membrane transporters in drug therapy in children.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26410689 PMCID: PMC4823323 DOI: 10.1007/s40262-015-0328-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Pharmacokinet ISSN: 0312-5963 Impact factor: 6.447
Nomenclature of human membrane transporters: selection transporters discussed in this paper [source: NCBI Gene (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/gene)]
| Gene | Protein | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Name | Locus | Name | Synonyms |
| ABC transporters | |||
| | 7q21.12 | ABCB1 | MDR1, P-glycoprotein (P-gp), CLCS, PGY1, ABC20, CD243, GP170 |
| | 10q24 | ABCC2 | MRP2, CMOAT, DJS, cMRP, ABC30 |
| | 17q22 | ABCC3 | MRP3, MOAT-D, cMOAT2, MLP2, ABC31, EST90757 |
| | 13q32 | ABCC4 | MRP4, MOAT-B, MOATB |
| | 4q22 | ABCG2 | BRCP, MXR, MRX, ABCP, BMDP, MXR1, BCRP1, CD338, GOUT1, CDw338, UAQTL1, EST157481 |
| SLC transporters | |||
| | 12p | OATP1B1 | OATP2, LST-1, OATP-C, HBLRR, LST1, SLC21A6 |
| | 12p12 | OATP1B3 | OATP8, LST-2, LST3, HBLRR, SLC21A8, LST-3TM13 |
| | 11q13 | OATP2B1 | OATP-B, SLC21A9 |
| | 11q13 | 4F2hc | 4F2, CD98, MDU1, 4T2HC, NACAE, CD98HC |
| | 6q25.3 | OCT1 | HOCT1, oct1_cds |
| | 6q25.3 | OCT2 | |
| | 11q12.3 | OAT1 | PAHT, HOAT1, ROAT1 |
| | 6q21.1 | OAT2 | NLT |
| | 11q11 | OAT3 | |
| | 13q32.3 | PEPT1 | HPEPT1, HPECT1 |
| | 17q11.2 | MATE1 | |
| | 17q11.2 | MATE2-K | MATE2, MATE2-B |
| Other | |||
| | 1p35-p34 | FAAH | FAAH-1, PSAB |
| | 5q31-q32 | ADRB2 | BAR, B2AR, ADRBR, ADRB2R, BETA2AR |
| | 8q22.1 | HPT1 | CDH16, LI cadherin |
ABC adenosine triphosphate (ATP)-binding cassette, ADRB2 β2-adrenergic receptor, FAAH fatty acid hydrolase, SLC solute carrier
Fig. 1Suggested ontogeny of ABCB1 expression in intestine, liver, kidney, and brain. ABC adenosine triphosphate (ATP)-binding cassette
Summary pharmacokinetic and pharmacogenetic studies of relevant membrane transporter substrates
| Drug | Relevant transporters involved in transport of drug | PK and PGx results in children |
|---|---|---|
| Digoxin | ABCB1 | Higher bodyweight-corrected digoxin clearance in term neonates and young children [ |
| Tacrolimus | ABCB1 | PGx studies of |
| Daptomycin | ABCB1 | Higher body size-corrected renal daptomycin clearance in neonates and younger infants [ |
| Fexofenadine | OATP2B1, ABCB1, MRP2 | Apparent bodyweight-corrected oral clearance was 1.5-fold lower in children 6 months to 6 years than in children 6–12 years [ |
| Morphine | OCT1, ABCB1, ABCC2, ABCC3, OATP1B1 | Neonates and infants have low morphine clearance in the first 10 days of life, increasing thereafter, largely due to immature UGT2B7 metabolism, but transporters may contribute [ |
| Pravastatin | OATP1B1, OATP2B1, OATP1B3, ABCB1, ABCC2 | Children with hypercholesterolemia and the |
| Atorvastatin | OATP1B1, BCRP | Atorvastatin PKs in older children similar to adult PKs [ |
| Bosentan | OATP1B1, OATP1B3, OATP2B1 | In children, an exposure limit was found at a much lower dose than in adults, which might be due to intestinal OATP2B1 saturation [ |
| Ondansetron | OCT1 | Ondansetron PKs and clinical efficacy have been correlated with OCT1 genotypes in adults [ |
| Metformin | OCT, MATE1, MATE2 K | Metformin PKs in children from 9 years of age onwards were comparable with adult PKs, suggesting stable OCT and MATE activity [ |
| Cimetidine | OCT2, MATE1, MATE2 K, OAT2 | In neonates and children, cimetidine (and metabolites) renal clearance accounts for 80–90 % of total clearance, whereas in adults it accounts for 60 % of total clearance [ |
| Tramadol | OCT1 | In adults, OCT1 genotype was related to metabolite plasma concentrations and prolonged miosis [ |
| Methotrexate | OATP1B1, ABCC2 | Increased renal toxicity in children 0–3 months old compared with infants 7–12 months [ |
| Mycophenolate mofetil | MRP2 | In pediatric patients, |
| Acyclovir/valacyclovir | 4F2hc, HPT1, OAT1, OAT3 | In neonates, the IV acyclovir bodyweight-corrected clearance showed a twofold increase from 25 to 41 weeks of gestational age [ |
| Adefovir | OAT1, MRP4 | Adefovir is partly renally cleared (45 %) [ |
ABC adenosine triphosphate (ATP)-binding cassette, AUC area under the plasma concentration–time curve, BCRP breast cancer resistance protein, GFR glomerular filtration rate, HPT human oligopeptide transporter, IV intravenous, M3G morphine-3-glucuronide, MATE multidrug and toxin extrusion protein, MPA mycophenolic acid, mRNA messenger RNA, MRP multidrug resistance-associated protein, OAT organic anion transporter, OATP organic anion-transporting polypeptide, OCT organic cation transporter, PGx pharmacogenetics, PK pharmacokinetic, UGT uridine 5′-diphospho-glucuronosyltransferase
Fig. 2Membrane transporters and their relationship with commonly prescribed drugs to children: digoxin, tacrolimus, morphine, pravastatin, and atorvastatin. ABC adenosine triphosphate (ATP)-binding cassette, CYP cytochrome P450, OATP organic anion-transporting polypeptide, OCT organic cation transporter, UGT uridine 5′-diphospho-glucuronosyltransferase
Approaches to future transporter studies
| Ex vivo research |
| PK studies |
| PGx studies |
LC–MS liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry, PD pharmacodynamic, PGx pharmacogenetic, PK pharmacokinetic
| Little is known about the ontogeny of transporters and their roles in pediatric pharmacotherapy. |
| Ex vivo, pharmacokinetic and pharmacogenetic studies suggest transporter-specific changes from the human fetus to the adult. |
| No clear transporter-specific maturation pattern can be deducted at this time, hence, further research is needed. |