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

Transport of cyclosporin A across the brain capillary endothelial cell monolayer by P-glycoprotein.

P-glycoprotein, a multidrug transporter protein, exists in the brain capillary endothelium. To study the function of P-glycoprotein in brain capillary endothelium as a barrier against cyclosporin A, we examined the interaction of cyclosporin A with P-glycoprotein expressed in cultured brain capillary endothelial cells (MBEC4). P-glycoprotein of MBEC4 specifically bound [125I]iodoaryl azidoprazosin, and the binding was inhibited by cyclosporin A and vincristine. Intracellular accumulation of cyclosporin A in MBEC4 was about one-third the amount accumulated in mouse aortic endothelial cells (MAEC3), a cell line that did not express P-glycoprotein. The reduced accumulation of cyclosporin A in MBEC4 was increased by verapamil, a competitive inhibitor of transport function of P-glycoprotein. Cyclosporin A was preferentially transported from basal to apical side when the cell monolayer of MBEC4 was formed; however this transendothelial transport was not observed across cell monolayer of MAEC3. Verapamil inhibited the transendothelial transport of cyclosporin A across the MBEC4 monolayer. Thus P-glycoprotein in brain capillary endothelium could transport cyclosporin A across the endothelium from the basal to the apical side. These observations suggest that P-glycoprotein is involved in the complex function of the blood-brain barrier as a secretory detoxifying transporter of cyclosporin A.[1]

References

  1. Transport of cyclosporin A across the brain capillary endothelial cell monolayer by P-glycoprotein. Shirai, A., Naito, M., Tatsuta, T., Dong, J., Hanaoka, K., Mikami, K., Oh-hara, T., Tsuruo, T. Biochim. Biophys. Acta (1994) [Pubmed]
 
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