| Literature DB >> 28365301 |
Kitti Szabó1, Zoltán Nagy2, Viktória Juhász3, Joseph K Zolnerciks4, Attila Csorba5, Zoltán Tímár6, Éva Molnár7, Petra Pádár8, William Johnson9, Erzsébet Beéry10, Péter Krajcsi11.
Abstract
The purpose of this study was to characterize the uptake of carnitine, the physiological substrate, and the uptake of 3-(2,2,2-trimethylhydrazinium)propionate, a consensus substrate by rat Octn2 and human OCTN2 transporters as well as to characterize drug-mediated inhibition of l-carnitine uptake by the rat and human orthologs overexpressed in CHO-K1 cells. l-carnitine and 3-(2,2,2-trimethylhydrazinium)propionate were found to be a lower affinity substrate for rat Octn2 (KM = 32.66 ± 5.11 μM and 23.62 ± 4.99 μM respectively) than for human OCTN2 (KM = 3.08 ± 0.74 μM and 7.98 ± 0.63 μM). The intrinsic clearance (CLint) value for carnitine was higher for the human than for the rat transporter (22.82 ± 5.57 ml/min*mg vs 4.008 ± 0.675 ml/min*mg). For 3-(2,2,2-trimethylhydrazinium)propionate, in contrast, the CLint value for rat Octn2 was higher than for human OCTN2 (323.9 ± 72.8 ml/min*mg vs 65.11 ± 5.33 ml/min*mg). Furthermore, many pharmacologically important drugs were shown to affect l-carnitine transport by Octn2/OCTN2. The correlation between the IC50 datasets for the rat and human transporter resulted in an r value of 0.47 (p > 0.05). However, the greatest difference was less than seven-fold and 13 of 15 compounds yielded a difference less than 3-fold. Thus, the transporters from these two species showed an overlapping but somewhat different substrate and inhibitor specificity.Entities:
Keywords: 3-(2,2,2-Trimethylhydrazinium)propionate; Characterization; Drug discovery; OCTN2; Toxicity; Transporter; l-carnitine
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Year: 2016 PMID: 28365301 DOI: 10.1016/j.dmpk.2016.08.005
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Drug Metab Pharmacokinet ISSN: 1347-4367 Impact factor: 3.614