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Evaluation of In Vitro Models for Assessment of Human Intestinal Metabolism in Drug Discovery

Authors :
Apoorva Kotian
Mari Davies
Prabha Peramuhendige
Nenad Manevski
Melanie Golding
Syeda Shah
Mark Penney
Lloyd King
Source :
Drug Metabolism and Disposition. 48:1169-1182
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
American Society for Pharmacology & Experimental Therapeutics (ASPET), 2020.

Abstract

Although intestinal metabolism plays an important role in drug disposition, early predictions of human outcomes are challenging, in part because of limitations of available in vitro models. To address this, we have evaluated three in vitro models of human intestine (microsomes, permeabilized enterocytes, and cryopreserved intestinal mucosal epithelium) as tools to assess intestinal metabolism and estimate the fraction escaping gut metabolism (fg) in drug discovery. The models were tested with a chemically diverse set of 32 compounds, including substrates for oxidoreductive, hydrolytic, and conjugative enzymes. Liquid chromatography–high-resolution mass spectrometry was used to quantify substrate disappearance [intrinsic clearance (CLint)] and qualify metabolite formation (quantitative-qualitative bioanalysis). Fraction unbound in the incubation (fu,inc) was determined by rapid equilibrium dialysis. Measured in vitro results (CLint and fu,inc) were supplemented with literature data [passive Caco-2 apical to basolateral permeability, enterocyte blood flow, and intestinal surface area (A)] and combined using a midazolam-calibrated Qgut model to predict human fg values. All three models showed reliable CYP and UDP-glucuronosyltransferase activities, but enterocytes and mucosa may offer advantages for low-clearance compounds and alternative pathways (e.g., sulfation, hydrolases, and flavin-containing monooxigenases). Early predictions of human fg values were acceptable for the high-fg compounds (arbitrarily fg > 0.7). However, predictions of low- and moderate-fg values (arbitrarily fg Significance Statement We found that cellular models of the human gut (permeabilized enterocytes and cryopreserved intestinal mucosa) offer an alternative to and potential advantage over intestinal microsomes in studies of drug metabolism, particularly for low-clearance compounds and alternative pathways (e.g., sulfation, hydrolases, and flavin-containing monooxigenases). The predictivity of human fraction escaping gut metabolism for common CYP and UDP-glucuronosyltransferase substrates based on the Qgut model is still limited, however, and appropriate further evaluation is recommended.

Details

ISSN :
1521009X and 00909556
Volume :
48
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Drug Metabolism and Disposition
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9cba88c73dd7e073a20460be1ac266f7
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1124/dmd.120.000111