3. INTRODUCTION
Drug transporters mediate the uptake and efflux of a broad variety of drugs and drug
metabolites
Drug–drug interactions is induction or inhibition of drug transporters that mediate the
cellular uptake and efflux of xenobiotic
Drug transporters of the small intestine, liver and kidney are major determinants of the
pharmacokinetic profile of drugs
Localized in organs such as small intestine, liver, and kidney, which are critical for drug
absorption and elimination
Inhibition or induction of drug transporters by co administered drugs can alter
pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of the victim drugs
4. BASIC MECHANISM OF TRANSPORT
The transport of drug across the membrane
occur through one or more of the following
processes
Simple diffusion (passive diffusion )
Facilitated diffusion
Active transport
Endocytosis
5. SIMPLE DIFFUSION
Simple diffusion is the process by
which solutes are moved along a
concentration gradient in a solution or
across a semipermeable membrane
BASIC MECHANISM OF TRANSPORT
FACILIATED DIFFUSION
Facilitated diffusion is the process of spontaneous
passive transport of molecules or ions across a
biological membrane via specific transmembrane
integral proteins
6. ACTIVE TRANSPORT
The movement of molecules across a
membrane from a region of their lower
concentration to a region of their
higher concentration—against the
concentration gradient
Active transport requires cellular
energy to achieve this movement
BASIC MECHANISM OF TRANSPORT
ENDOCYTOSIS
A cellular process in which substances are
brought into the cell.
The material to be internalized is surrounded
by an area of plasma membrane, which then
buds off inside the cell to form a vesicle
containing the ingested material
7. MEMBRANE TRANSPORTER
Ꙭ Transporters (membrane transport/carrier
proteins) are specialized membrane-spanning
proteins that assist in the movement of ions,
peptides, small molecules, lipids and
macromolecules across a biological
membrane.
Ꙭ Drug transporters are now well recognized
determinants of drug disposition and effects
Ꙭ Functionally, they can be classified into
transporters mediating the uptake of drugs
into cells and transporters mediating the
export of drugs or drug metabolites out of
cells
8. TYPES OF TRANSPORTERS
Uptake transporters
Members of the solute carrier (SLC) family
Mediating the transport of substances from outside
into cells
Members are
1. OAT : organic anion tansporter
2. OCT (SLC FAMILY SLC21/22/0) : organic cation
transporter
Transport a variety of amphipathic substances,
including several endogenously synthesized
metabolites such as bile acids, thyroid hormones,
or hormone conjugates ,antibiotics,
chemotherapeutic agents, antihistaminic drugs, and
diuretics
EFFLUX TRANSPORTERS
Members of the ATP binding cassette (ABC) transporter
family *exception is the MATE (multidrug and toxin
extrusion) proteins, also members of the SLC transporter
superfamily
Export proteins transporting substances out of cells
Members are
1. MDR/TAP FAMILY : Multi drug resistance protein
2. MRP2 PROTEIN
3. BCRP PROTEIN
4. MATE
5. P- gp
11. INTESTINAL DRUG TRANSPORTERS
• Consists of polarized enterocytes
• In these cells, several drug
transporters have been identified
Pass
Drug
Gut wall
mucosa
Portal vein
12. INTESTINAL DRUG TRANSPORTERS
UPTAKE TRANSPORTERS
Transporters of the SLC family facilitate the
cellular uptake of their substrates
The p-gp inducer RIFAMPIN, conversely,
caused a marked reduction of ALISKIREN
bioavailability
ALISKIREN has been described as a substrate
of intestinal p-gp and OATP2B1
A strong increase of aliskiren plasma
concentrations when coadministered with
itraconazole
Itraconazole an inhibitor of p-gp
13. INTESTINAL DRUG TRANSPORTER
Efflux transporter
ABC transporters such as p-gp
mediate the ATP-dependent efflux
of drugs back into the intestinal
lumen
In 1999, Greiner et al. reported a study
that investigated the effect of treatment
with the antibiotic rifampin on digoxin
pharmacokinetics
Duodenal biopsies demonstrated a 3.5-
fold increase of p-gp expression
Rifampin reduces oral digoxin
bioavailability by the induction of intestinal
p-gp
15. HEPATIC TRANSPORTERS
The liver is a major contributor to
first – pass elimination for orally
as well as for plasma clearance
Rate 1500 ml/ min
Major part : Portal vein 70-80%
Minor part: Hepatic artery
16. HEPATIC TRANSPORTERS
Uptake transporter
Transporters that are localized at the sinusoidal membrane of hepatocytes mediate the uptake
OATP1B1 , OATPIB3 , OAT2B1 & NTCP (SODIUM/TAUROCHOLATE COTRANSPORTING POLYPEPTIDE)
The fibrate gemfibrozil and its major metabolite gemfibrozil-1-o-b-glucuronide are moderate inhibitors of
OATP1B1 ,OATP1B3
• Statins are widely used to reduce the occurrence of cardiovascular events and death in patients at risk
• Statins have toxic muscle side effects which is rhabdomyolysis
• statins are substrates of drug transporters in the intestine, liver and kidney; all of which may influence statin
plasma concentrations
• concomitant oral administration of gemfibrozil (1200 mg daily for 3 days) with pravastatin (40 mg single dose
on day 3) caused an increase of pravastatin AUC and Cmax by 102 and 81%, respectively
Increases of statin plasma concentrations have been observed following the coadministration of cyclosporine
17. HEPATIC TRANSPORTERS
EFFLUX TRANSPORTER
Atp-dependent efflux transporters and the multidrug and toxin extrusion protein (MATE) 1
• Driven by the transmembraneous proton gradient, are localized in the canalicular membrane of
the hepatocyte
• Concomitant administration of quinidine or verapamil reduced the biliary digoxin clearance in
humans by approximately 45%
• Quinidine and verapamil have been identified as potent inhibitors of p-gp-mediated digoxin
transport
• MATE1 is believed to be important for the renal tubular secretion of cationic drugs such as
metformin
• MATE1 knockout or inhibition by pyrimethamine caused a marked increase of metformin liver tissue
concentration
18. RENAL TRANSPORTERS
o Drugs are eliminated in the kidney by glomerular filtration and/or tubular secretion
o Uptake transporters in the basolateral membrane & export transporters in the luminal membrane of the
renal tubule cells are involved in the tubular secretion of their substrates
o Inhibition of these transport processes may decrease the renal clearance of drugs
o Inhibition of cellular uptake may improve the benefit–risk ratio of nephrotoxic drugs
20. RENAL TRANSPORTERS
UPTAKE TRANSPORTERS
• Inhibition of organic anion transporters (oats) or the organic cation transporter (OCT) 2 at the basolateral
membrane of renal proximal tubule cells decreases the cellular uptake of their substrates
• The uricosuric drug probenecid is the prototypical inhibitor of the organic anion transporters OAT1 and
OAT3
• Probenecid was originally developed to prolong the plasma half-life of the antibiotic benzylpenicillin
• Benzylpenicillin is a substrate of OAT3
• Probenecid was identified as being a clinically relevant inhibitor of OAT1 and OAT3
• Concomitant administration of probenecid decreased the renal clearance of methotrexate and
furosemide
• A beneficial interaction that reduces the risk of adverse drug reactions has been described for the
combination of probenecid and cidofovir
21. RENAL TRANSPORTERS
• Inhibition of oct2-mediated cisplatin uptake could have renoprotective effects in cancer therapy
• Tyrosine kinase inhibitor imatinib inhibits cisplatin-induced cytotoxicity
• In vivo studies in mice and rats demonstrated a partial protection from cisplatin-induced nephrotoxicity by
cimetidine and imatinib
• OCT2 transports a broad spectrum of drugs including, for example, amantadine , H2-receptor blockers ,
metformin
UPTAKE TRANSPORTER
22. RENAL TRANSPORTERS
EFFLUX TRANSPORTERS
• In 2005, Otsuka et al. described MATE1 as a transport protein that is localized at the canalicular membrane of
hepatocytes and at the luminal membrane of renal tubule cells
• Depending on an oppositely directed proton gradient as a driving force, MATE1 may either act as an uptake
or efflux transporter
• Extracellular alkalinization or intracellular acidification increases MATE1-mediated uptake
• An increased accumulation of metformin in kidney tissue was also observed in mice that were treated with
the MATE1 inhibitor pyrimethamine
• An important and well characterized export protein at the luminal membrane of renal proximal tubule cells is
P-gp
• Concomitant administration of the P-gp inhibitor quinidine decreases the renal clearance of digoxin
• Renal digoxin clearance was also decreased by other P-gp inhibitors such as ritonavir or itraconazole
23. RENAL TRANSPORTERS
• Localization of bcrp at the luminal membrane of renal proximal tubule cells has been reported
• Important for the renal secretion of drugs
• Vlaming et al. Found that bcrp mediated a substantial urinary excretion of methotrexate
• Uric acid has been identified as substrate of BCR
• Recent data demonstrate an association of polymorphisms in the abcg2 gene (encoding BCRP) with
increased uric acid levels, as well as with the risk of developing gout . Therefore, inhibition of renal
BCRP by concomitantly administered drugs might be a risk factor for gout.
EFFLUX TRANSPORTERS
24.
25. REFERENCES
• Transporters and Drug-Drug Interactions: Important Determinants of Drug
Disposition and Effectss
Jörg König, Fabian Müller, and Martin F. Fromm Institute of Experimental and
Clinical Pharmacology and Toxicology, Friedrich-Alexander-Universität
Erlangen-Nürnberg, Germany
• Transporter-mediated drug–drug interactions
Fabian Müller1 & Martin F Fromm†1 1Institute of Experimental & Clinical
Pharmacology & Toxicology, Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-
Nürnberg, Fahrstrasse 17, 91054 Erlangen, Germany