| Literature DB >> 33903659 |
Vincent Haufroid1,2, Laure Elens3,4, Gabriel Stillemans5,1, Happy Phanio Djokoto5,1, Kévin-Alexandre Delongie2, Halima El-Hamdaoui5, Nadtha Panin1.
Abstract
The intracellular penetration of darunavir, a second-generation HIV protease inhibitor, is limited by the activity of the efflux P-glycoprotein (ABCB1). ABCB1 expression and/or activity levels can vary between individuals due to genetic polymorphisms including the c.1199G>A, c.1236C>T, c.2677G>T and c.3435C>T variants, which could in part explain why the pharmacokinetics of darunavir are so variable from one individual to another. While a few clinical studies have failed to demonstrate an influence of these polymorphisms on darunavir pharmacokinetics, drug-drug interactions and methodological limitations may have prevented them from revealing the true influence of ABCB1 variants. In this work, we report on the intracellular accumulation of darunavir in recombinant HEK293 cell lines expressing wild-type ABCB1 or one of several variants: ABCB1 1199A, ABCB1 3435T, and ABCB1 1236T/2677T/3435T. We demonstrate that while ABCB1 expression limits intracellular accumulation of darunavir, there is no significant difference in efflux activity between cells expressing wild-type ABCB1 and those that express any of the studied variants.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33903659 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-88365-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379