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Establishment of MDR1-knockout human enteroids for pharmaceutical application

Authors :
Tatsuya Inui
Ryuga Nomoto
Jumpei Yokota
Tomoki Yamashita
Kentaro Okada
Wataru Kishimoto
Hiroshi Nakase
Hiroyuki Mizuguchi
Source :
Drug Metabolism and Pharmacokinetics. 48:100476
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2023.

Abstract

In the drug development process, it is important to assess the contributions of drug-metabolizing enzymes and/or drug transporters to the intestinal pharmacokinetics of candidate compounds. For such assessments, chemical inhibitors are often used in in vitro systems. However, this practice poses two problems: one is the low expression levels of pharmacokinetic-related genes in conventional in vitro systems, such as Caco-2 cells, and the other is the off-target and less-efficient effects of their inhibitors. Here, as a model, we have established human biopsy-derived enteroids deficient in MDR1, a key efflux transporter. The expression levels and activities of other pharmacokinetic-related genes, such as CYP3A4, in the MDR1-knockout (KO) enteroid-derived monolayers were maintained at levels as high as those in the WT enteroid-derived monolayers. The contribution of MDR1 to the cytotoxicity of vinblastine, which CYP3A4 metabolized, was accurately evaluated by using the MDR1-KO enteroid-derived monolayers. In contrast, it could not be evaluated in the WT enteroid-derived monolayers treated by verapamil, a widely used MDR1 inhibitor, due to the off-target effect of verapamil, which also inhibits CYP3A4. The combination of human enteroid-derived monolayers and genome editing technology would be a powerful tool to evaluate the contributions of specific pharmacokinetic-related molecules.

Details

ISSN :
13474367
Volume :
48
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Drug Metabolism and Pharmacokinetics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2885245395842206b75fb3377a38daca
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dmpk.2022.100476