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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 

Altered drug disposition of the platelet activating factor antagonist apafant in mdr1a knockout mice.

The aim of the present study was to determine a potential impact of P-glycoprotein ( P-gp) on the tissue distribution and disposition of apafant (WEB 2086, CAS 105219-56-5), a selective platelet-activating factor antagonist, and on digoxin in mdr1a(-/-) and wildtype mice. Transport experiments in Caco-2 monolayers at low concentrations (<10 microM) showed that the secretory flux of [(14)C]apafant and [(3)H]digoxin exceeded the absorptive flux nine times. This efflux was concentration dependent and subject to inhibition by the P-gp substrates verapamil and cyclosporin A. This indicates that active drug transporter P-gp was involved in apafant and digoxin absorption. Mdr1a(-/-) mice showed a more than 70-fold higher concentration of digoxin-related radioactivity (P<0.001) in the brain than wildtype mice after intravenous doses of 0.05 mg/kg [(3)H]digoxin. Differences were less pronounced in other tissues. Both liquid scintillation counting and whole body autoradiography yielded comparable results and they also matched recently published data. Apafant-related radioactivity was about ten-fold higher in the brain of mdr1a(-/-) mice compared to wildtype mice following intravenous doses of 2 mg/kg radiolabelled apafant. Only slight or negligible differences were observed in other tissues. In wildtype mice, intestinal excretion of [(14)C]apafant (54.9%) exceeded biliary excretion (26.5%). However, in mdr1a(-/-) mice biliary excretion (50.7%) exceeded intestinal excretion (6.8%). These differences were mirrored in the urinary and faecal excretion. Pharmacokinetic parameters of apafant and radioactivity did not differ between wildtype and mdr1a(-/-) mice. The conclusions were: (1) apafant and digoxin are P-gp substrates, and (2) absence of mdr1a encoded P-gp significantly alters tissue distribution (especially in brain) and excretion routes (biliary and intestinal) of apafant.[1]

References

  1. Altered drug disposition of the platelet activating factor antagonist apafant in mdr1a knockout mice. Leusch, A., Volz, A., Müller, G., Wagner, A., Sauer, A., Greischel, A., Roth, W. European journal of pharmaceutical sciences : official journal of the European Federation for Pharmaceutical Sciences. (2002) [Pubmed]
 
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