| Literature DB >> 29659532 |
Elisa Lozano1,2, Oscar Briz3,4, Rocio I R Macias5,6, Maria A Serrano5,6, Jose J G Marin7,8, Elisa Herraez9,10.
Abstract
An important aspect of modern medicine is its orientation to achieve more personalized pharmacological treatments. In this context, transporters involved in drug disposition have gained well-justified attention. Owing to its broad spectrum of substrate specificity, including endogenous compounds and xenobiotics, and its strategical expression in organs accounting for drug disposition, such as intestine, liver and kidney, the SLC22 family of transporters plays an important role in physiology, pharmacology and toxicology. Among these carriers are plasma membrane transporters for organic cations (OCTs) and anions (OATs) with a marked overlap in substrate specificity. These two major clades of SLC22 proteins share a similar membrane topology but differ in their degree of genetic variability. Members of the OCT subfamily are highly polymorphic, whereas OATs have a lower number of genetic variants. Regarding drug disposition, changes in the activity of these variants affect intestinal absorption and target tissue uptake, but more frequently they modify plasma levels due to enhanced or reduced clearance by the liver and secretion by the kidney. The consequences of these changes in transport-associated function markedly affect the effectiveness and toxicity of the treatment in patients carrying the mutation. In solid tumors, changes in the expression of these transporters and the existence of genetic variants substantially determine the response to anticancer drugs. Moreover, chemoresistance usually evolves in response to pharmacological and radiological treatment. Future personalized medicine will require monitoring these changes in a dynamic way to adapt the treatment to the weaknesses shown by each tumor at each stage in each patient.Entities:
Keywords: cancer; carrier; chemotherapy; mutation; pharmacology; polymorphism; tumor
Year: 2018 PMID: 29659532 PMCID: PMC6023491 DOI: 10.3390/jpm8020014
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pers Med ISSN: 2075-4426
Figure 1Scheme of the main features regarding organ distribution of proteins belonging to the SLC22 family of transporters able to transport organic cations. OCT: organic cation transporter; OCTN: organic carnitine transporter.
Figure 2Scheme of the main features regarding organ distribution of proteins belonging to the SLC22 family of transporters able to transport organic anions. OAT: organic anion transporter. OCTL: organic cation transporter-like; S22AO: SLC22A orphan; URAT: urate transporter; UST: unknown substrate transporter.
Characteristics of the human organic cation transporters of the SLC22A family.
| Major Clade | Subclade | Gene | Protein | Tissue Distribution | Endogenous Substrates | Xenobiotic Substrates/Inhibitors |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| OCT | Oct | OCT1 | Liver and to a less extent also in brain, heart, immune cells, intestine, kidney and lung | Biogenic monoamines, biogenic polyamines, catecholamines, ethanolamines, neuromodulators, vitamins, prostaglandins | Cimetidine, ciprofloxacin, famotidine, lamivudine, lamotrigine, metformin, O-desmethyltramadol, ondansetron, quinidine, ranitidine, sumatriptan, tropisetron, zalcitabine | |
| OCT | Oct | OCT2 | Kidney, brain, lung | Acetylcholine, dopamine, serotonin | Amantadine, anti-malarials, atenolol, cimetidine, entecavir, fluoroquinolones, metformin, procainamide, quinidine, sulpiride | |
| OCT | Oct | OCT3 | Widely expressed | Norepinephrine | Metformin, wogonin | |
| OCT | Octn | OCTN1 | Kidney, bone marrow, trachea, fetal liver (at lower levels in many tissues) | Acetylcholine, carnitine | Ergothioneine, entecavir, fluoroquinolones, gabapentin, sulpiride | |
| OCT | Octn | OCTN2 | Intestine, kidney, placenta, mammary gland | Carnitine | Entecavir, fluoroquinolones, sulpiride |
Characteristics of the human organic anion transporters of the SLC22A family.
| Major Clade | Subclade | Gene | Protein | Tissue Distribution | Endogenous Substrates | Xenobiotic Substrates/Inhibitors |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| OAT | Oat | OAT1 | Kidney, brain | cGMP, C5- and C6-mono and dicarboxylates, prostaglandins, urate | Acyclovir, adefovir, captopril, cidofovir, cimetidine, furosemide, ganciclovir, methotrexate, olmesartan, tenofovir, ranitidine | |
| OAT | Oat | OAT2 | Liver, kidney | Conjugated steroid hormones, cGMP, nucleobases, nucleosides, nucleotides, prostaglandins | Acyclovir, cimetidine, diclofenac, entecavir, erythromycin, ganciclovir, irinotecan, methotrexate, penciclovir, ranitidine, tetracycline, 5-FU | |
| OAT | Oat | OAT3 | Kidney, retina, brain | Acidic neurotransmitter metabolites, bile acids, C5-dicarboxylates, cAMP, cGMP, conjugated steroid hormones, prostaglandins, urate | Cimetidine, benzylpenicillin, bumetanide, cephalosporins, ciprofloxacin, furosemide, methotrexate, NSAIDs, pravastatin, probenecid, rosuvastatin, zidovudine | |
| OAT | Oat | OAT7 | Liver | Conjugated steroid hormones, monocarboxylates, short chain fatty acids | Pravastatin | |
| OAT | Oat | OAT5 | Liver | Unknown | ||
| OAT | Oat | OAT4 | Kidney, placenta, adrenal gland | Bile acids, C5-dicarboxylates, conjugated steroid hormones prostaglandins, urate | Bumetanide, hydrochlorothiazide, ketoprofen, methotrexate, salicylate, tetracycline, torsemide, zidovudine | |
| OAT | Oat | URAT1 | Kidney | Urate | ||
| OAT | Oat | OAT6 | Nasal epithelial cells | Conjugated steroid hormones, C5-dicarboxylates, short chain fatty acids | Sorafenib | |
| OAT | Oat | S22AO | Kidney | Unknown | ||
| OAT | Oat | UST6 | Liver | Unknown | ||
| OAT | Oat-like | OAT10 | Kidney, brain, colon | C4-dicarboxylates, glutathione, nicotinate, urate | ||
| OAT | Oat-like | OCTL2 | Testis, kidney | Unknown |
Genetic variants in human organic cation transporters of the SLC22A family.
| Transporter | Genetic Polymorphism | Amino Acid Change | Effect on Expression | Activity | Effect on Drug Disposition |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| OCT1 (SLC22A1) | c.181C>T | R61C | = | Reduced | Reduced intestinal uptake of metformin |
| Higher plasma concentrations of O-desmethyltramadol, sumatriptan, morphine, tropisetron, ondansetron | |||||
| c.252T>C | C88R | = | Reduced | Increased systemic exposure to sumatriptan | |
| c.1201G>A | G401S | = | Reduced | Reduced intestinal uptake of metformin | |
| Higher plasma concentrations of O-desmethyltramadol, sumatriptan, morphine, tropisetron, ondansetron | |||||
| c.1222A>G | M408V | = | Similar | Gastrointestinal side-effects of metformin | |
| Alteration of lamotrigine serum concentration | |||||
| c.1258_1260delATG | M420del | = | Reduced | Reduced intestinal uptake of metformin | |
| Higher plasma concentrations of O-desmethyltramadol, morphine, tropisetron, ondansetron | |||||
| c.1386A>C (rs622342) | - | ↓Expected | Reduced | Low effect of metformin, levodopa | |
| c.1393G>C | G465R | = | Reduced | Reduced intestinal uptake of metformin | |
| Increased systemic exposure to sumatriptan | |||||
| OCT*5 | G465R + M420del | = | Reduced | Higher plasma concentrations of O-desmethyltramadol, morphine, tropisetron and ondansetron | |
| OCT1*6 | C88R + M420del | = | Reduced | Higher plasma concentrations of O-desmethyltramadol, morphine, tropisetron and ondansetron | |
| rs36056065 (c.1276 + 1ins GTAAGTTG) | - | Aberrant splicing | Gastrointestinal side-effects of metformin | ||
| OCT2 (SLC22A2) | c.495G>A | M165I | Reduced | ||
| c.596C>G | T199I | Reduced | Reduced renal clearance of metformin | ||
| c.602C>T | T201M | Reduced | Reduced renal clearance of metformin | ||
| c.808G>T | A270S | Reduced | Reduced renal clearance of metformin | ||
| c.1198C>T | R400C | Reduced | |||
| c.1294A>C | K432Q | Similar | |||
| OCT3 (SLC22A3) | A116S | = | Reduced | ||
| T400I | = | Reduced | |||
| A439V | = | Reduced | |||
| OCTN1 (SLC22A4) | c.188G>A | R63H | ↓Membrane | Reduced | |
| c.248G>C | R83P | ↓Membrane | Reduced | ||
| c.400C>A | L134M | Similar | |||
| c.475G>A | V159M | Similar | |||
| c.494A>G | D165G | ↓Membrane | Lost | ||
| c.615G>A | M205I | ↓Membrane | Reduced | ||
| c.774G>C | M258I | Similar | |||
| c.844C>T | K282X | Lost | |||
| c.917C>T | T306I | = | Similar | ||
| c.1031T>A | M344K | Similar | |||
| c.1445G>A | G482D | = | Reduced | ||
| c.1460T>C | M487T | Similar | |||
| c.1499T>A | I500N | = | Reduced | ||
| c.1507G>A | L503F | = | Reduced | Reduced tubular secretion of gabapentin | |
| c.1531G>A | = | Reduced | |||
| OCTN2 (SLC22A5) | c.51C>G | F17L | Reduced | ||
| c.325G>C | E109Q | Similar | |||
| c.364G>T | D122Y | ↓Membrane | Reduced | ||
| c.430C>T | L144F | Similar | |||
| c.523G>A | V175M | Similar | |||
| c.573G>T | K191N | Similar | |||
| c.614C>T | A214V | Similar | |||
| c.791C>T | T264M | Reduced | |||
| c.904A>G | K302E | ↓Membrane | Reduced | ||
| c.934A>G | I312V | Similar | |||
| c.949G>A | E317K | Higher | |||
| M352R | = | Lost | |||
| c.1345T>G | Y449D | Reduced | |||
| P478L | = | Lost | |||
| c.1341TG>T | V481F | Reduced | |||
| V481I | Similar | ||||
| c.1463G>A | R488H | Similar | |||
| c.1522T>C | F508L | Similar | |||
| c.1588A>G | M530V | Similar | |||
| c.1645C>T | P549S | Similar |
Genetic variants in human organic anion transporters of the SLC22A family.
| Transporter | Genetic Polymorphism | Amino Acid Change | Effect on Expression | Activity | Effect on Drug Disposition |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| OAT1 (SLC22A6) | c.149G>A/C | R50H | = | Higher affinity for adefovir, cidofovir and tenofovir | No effect on renal clearance |
| c.1361G>A | R454Q | = | Loss of activity | No effect on renal clearance | |
| OAT2 (SLC22A7) | c.492_493insTCCCAG | E131_W132insSQ | = | Lost | Not investigated |
| c.1592 + 206A>G | – | ↑ | Higher cell uptake | Anthracycline-induced cardiotoxicity and severe toxicity to capecitabine | |
| OAT3 (SLC22A8) | c.445C>A | R149S | = | Lost | Not investigated |
| c.715C>T | N239X | = | Lost | Not investigated | |
| c.779T>G | I260R | = | Lost | Not investigated | |
| c.829C>T | R277W | = | Reduced | Not investigated | |
| c.913A>T | I305F | = | Reduced | Lower renal clearance of cefotaxime | |
| OAT4 (SLC22A11) | c.86T>C | L29P | = | Lower renal clearance of torsemide | |
| c.142C>T | R48Y | = | Reduced | ||
| c.464T>G | V155G | = | Reduced | ||
| c.1175C>T | T392I | = | Reduced | ||
| OAT7 (SLC22A9) | c.268C>T | R90C | = | Reduced | Reduced hepatic uptake of pravastatin |
| c.1298C>G | T433R | = | Reduced | ||
| c.1298C>T | T433M | = | Reduced | ||
| c.1437A>G | I479M | = | Reduced | ||
| URAT1 (SLC22A12) | c.269G>A | R90H | = | Lost | Lower renal clearance of drugs substrates of the transporter |
| c.412G>A | V138M | = | Lost | ||
| c.490G>A | G164S | = | Reduced | ||
| c.650C>T | T217M | = | Lost | ||
| c.774G>A | W258X | = | Lost | ||
| c.889C>T | Q297X | = | Lost | ||
| c.894G>T | E298D | = | Lost | ||
| c.1145A>T | Q382L | = | Reduced | ||
| c.1289T>C | M430T | = | Reduced | ||
| c.1639_1643del | V547Kfs | = | Lost | ||
| IVS2 + 1G>A | – | Aberrant splicing | Lost |