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Fitting Transporter Activities to Cellular Drug Concentrations and Fluxes: Why the Bumblebee Can Fly.

Authors :
Mendes, Pedro
Oliver, Stephen G.
Kell, Douglas B.
Source :
Trends in Pharmacological Sciences. Nov2015, Vol. 36 Issue 11, p710-723. 14p.
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

A recent paper in this journal argued that reported expression levels, k cat and K m for drug transporters could be used to estimate the likelihood that drug fluxes through Caco-2 cells could be accounted for solely by protein transporters. It was in fact concluded that if five such transporters contributed ‘randomly’ they could account for the flux of the most permeable drug tested (verapamil) 35% of the time. However, the values of permeability cited for verapamil were unusually high; this and other drugs have much lower permeabilities. Even for the claimed permeabilities, we found that a single ‘random’ transporter could account for the flux 42% of the time, and that two transporters can achieve 10 · 10 −6 cm·s −1 90% of the time. Parameter optimisation methods show that even a single transporter can account for Caco-2 drug uptake of the most permeable drug. Overall, the proposal that ‘phospholipid bilayer diffusion (of drugs) is negligible’ is not disproved by the calculations of ‘likely’ transporter-based fluxes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01656147
Volume :
36
Issue :
11
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Trends in Pharmacological Sciences
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
110741950
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tips.2015.07.006