| Literature DB >> 27276518 |
Takanori Akazawa1, Yasuo Uchida1, Masanori Tachikawa1, Sumio Ohtsuki2, Tetsuya Terasaki1.
Abstract
The purpose of this study was to investigate whether a pharmacokinetic model integrating in vitro mdr1a efflux activity (which we previously reported) with in vitro/in vivo differences in protein expression level can reconstruct intestinal mdr1a function. In situ intestinal permeability-surface area product ratio between wild-type and mdr1a/1b (-/-) mice is one of the parameters used to describe intestinal mdr1a function. The reconstructed ratios of six mdr1a substrates (dexamethasone, digoxin, loperamide, quinidine, verapamil, vinblastine) and one nonsubstrate (diazepam) were consistent with the observed values reported by Adachi et al. within 2.1-fold difference. Thus, intestinal mdr1a function can be reconstructed by our pharmacoproteomic modeling approach. Furthermore, we evaluated regional differences in protein expression levels of mouse intestinal transporters. Sixteen (mdr1a, mrp4, bcrp, abcg5, abcg8, glut1, 4f2hc, sglt1, lat2, pept1, mct1, slc22a18, ostβ, villin1, Na(+)/K(+)-ATPase, γ-gtp) out of 46 target molecules were detected by employing our established quantitative targeted absolute proteomics technique. The protein expression amounts of mdr1a and bcrp increased progressively from duodenum to ileum. Sglt1, lat2, and 4f2hc were highly expressed in jejunum and ileum. Mct1 and ostβ were highly expressed in ileum. The quantitative expression profiles established here should be helpful to understand and predict intestinal transporter functions.Entities:
Keywords: P-glycoprotein/multidrug resistance protein 1a; drug absorption; pharmacoproteomics; protein quantification; quantitative targeted absolute proteomics; small intestine; transporter
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27276518 DOI: 10.1021/acs.molpharmaceut.6b00196
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Pharm ISSN: 1543-8384 Impact factor: 4.939