![]() |
|
|
Vol. 28, Issue 7, 801-806, July 2000
Departments of Pharmaceutical Sciences (K.S.P.) and Pharmacology (T.N.A., K.S.P.), University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada; the Marion Bessin Liver Research Center, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, New York (A.W.W.); and Division of Clinical Pharmacology, Departments of Medicine and Pharmacology, Vanderbilt University, School of Medicine, Nashville, Tennessee (R.B.K.)
| |
Abstract |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Sinusoidal entry is the first obligatory process preceding intracellular drug removal in liver. Transport of the angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor enalapril (1-750 µM with [3H]enalapril), a substrate of Oatp1, the sodium-independent organic anion transporting polypeptide 1 cloned from rat liver, was studied in rat hepatocytes isolated from all zones of the liver (homogeneous) and from enriched periportal (PP) and perivenous (PV) hepatocytes prepared by collagenase perfusion and zone-selective destruction with digitonin, respectively. Uptake was linear over 1 min and was concentration-dependent. Transport by the homogeneous hepatocytes (in the presence and absence of Na+) and PP and PV cells was described by single saturable components of similar kinetic constants (Km values of 344-461 µM and Vmax values of 9.5-11.6 nmol/min/106 cells; P > .05, ANOVA). The Km value for enalapril uptake in hepatocytes was of the same order of magnitude compared with that for Oatp1 expressed in HeLa cells transfected with cDNA-Oatp1 and Western blot analysis revealed similar levels of immunoreactive Oatp1 expression in PP and PV hepatocytes. However, enalapril was not taken up by Oatp2 nor by the human OATP expressed in recombinant vaccinia systems.
| |
Introduction |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Hepatic transport is of
paramount importance in the overall fate of drugs in the liver. In
addition to the heterogeneity in drug-metabolizing activities, acinar
transport is known to affect the ultimate removal of substrates
(Gumucio, 1983
; Meijer and Groothuis, 1991
; Kwon and Morris, 1997
).
Recently, the angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor
(ACEi)1
enalapril
[(S)-1-[N-[1-(ethoxycarbonyl)-3-phenylpropyl]-L-alanyl]-L-proline], was shown to be taken up by the organic anion transporting polypeptide 1 (Oatp1) cloned from rat liver in expression systems with a
Michaelis-Menten constant (Km) of 214 µM
(Pang et al., 1998
). Oatp1 transport is a
Na+-independent process (Jacquemin et al., 1994
)
involving the probable countertransport of bicarbonate (Satlin et al.,
1997
) and/or glutathione (Li et al., 1998
). Oatp1, in particular, is
capable of transporting endogenous organic anions such as the bile acid
taurocholate (Jacquemin et al., 1994
; Shi et al., 1995
; Satlin et al.,
1997
) and the steroid hormone estrone-3-sulfate (Bossuyt et al., 1996
).
The cholephilic dye bromosulfophthalein (BSP; Jacquemin et al., 1994
;
Satlin et al., 1997
) modified peptides exemplified by the thrombin
inhibitor CRC-220 (Eckhardt et al., 1996
), and more recently, the
ACEis, enalapril (Pang et al., 1998
) and temocaprilat (Ishizuka et al., 1998
), have all been identified as exogenous substrates of Oatp1.
The identification of Oatp1-mediated uptake of the prototypic
nonsulfhydryl ACEi enalapril and not of the active diacid metabolite, enalaprilat, has provided an explanation of the high clearance of
enalapril in the single pass perfused liver preparation (Pang et al.,
1984
). Studies by Pang et al. (1991)
showed that the overall hydrolysis
of enalapril to enalaprilat occurs predominantly in the perivenous (PV)
region of the intact rat liver. It remains to be determined whether or
not transport heterogeneity exists for enalapril because the overall
removal within zonal regions may be due either to variation in
intracellular enzyme activities and/or transport capacities among zonal hepatocytes.
It has been reported that transport proteins are heterogeneously
distributed at the basolateral membrane of the liver. The human
multidrug resistance associated protein 3 (MRP3) is more abundant in
the periportal (PP) region (Kool et al., 1999
), whereas Oatp2, another
transporter of the Oatp family in rat liver (Kakyo et al., 1999
;
Reichel et al., 1999
), the organic cation transporter, rOCT
(Meyer-Wentrup et al., 1998
), the sodium-dependent
dicarboxylate/sulfate transporter, sDCT2 (Chen et al., 1999
), and the
cysteine (Saiki et al., 1992
) and glutamate transporters in rat
liver (Stoll et al., 1991
) are more preponderant in the PV region.
The studies presented herein were therefore conducted to test the hypotheses that uptake of enalapril into isolated rat hepatocytes is mediated by Oatp1 and is homogeneously distributed in rat liver. For hypothesis testing, enalapril uptake studies were conducted with homogeneous and zonal rat hepatocytes, and expression of Oatp1 among zonal cells was further characterized by Western blot analysis. The role of other Oatps for enalapril transport was investigated in recombinant vaccinia expression systems for Oatp1, Oatp2, and the organic anion transporting polypeptide cloned from human liver (OATP).
| |
Experimental Procedures |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Materials.
[3H]Enalapril was synthesized as described
previously (Pang et al., 1998
). Enalaprilat and unlabeled enalapril
were obtained from Merck-Frosst (Montreal, PQ).
[14C]Sucrose (specific activity, 0.05 mCi/ml)
was purchased from DuPont (Boston, MA). Estrone-3-sulfate, harmol
sulfate, DIDS (4,4'-diisothiocyanostilbene-2, 2'-disulfonic acid),
ouabain, rotenone, BSA, and alanine-proline were purchased from Sigma
Chemical Co. (St. Louis, MO). KCN was obtained from Aldrich Chemical
Company Inc. (Milwaukee, WI). Collagenase A (clostridium histolyticum)
was purchased from Boehringer Mannheim (Darmstadt, Germany). All other
reagents and solvents were of HPLC grade.
Expression Systems for Oatp1, Oatp2, and OATP.
The transporter cDNA constructs and transfection of the cDNAs have been
described in detail in a previous report (Cvetkovic et al., 1999
).
Transport studies in HeLa cells transfected with 1 µg of plasmid cDNA
or the parental plasmid lacking any transporter sequence for the
control were initiated by the addition of 0.4 ml/well of
[3H]enalapril (5 µM). Uptake was allowed to
occur at 37°C, then transport activity was stopped at 10 min as
previously described (Cvetkovic et al., 1999
). After lysing of the
cells, the radioactivity associated with the cell lysate was counted by
liquid scintillation spectrometry (Rackbeta model 1219; LKB
Instruments, Gaithersburg, MD).
Isolation of Rat Hepatocytes.
Isolated rat hepatocytes were prepared by the method of Tan et al.
(1999)
from male Sprague-Dawley rats (275-375 g; Charles River, St.
Constant, PQ). Rats were anesthetized by i.p. injection of
pentobarbital (65 mg/kg) in accordance with protocols approved by the
Animal Care Committee of the Department of Comparative Medicine at the
University of Toronto. All buffers were pregassed with carbogen (95%
O2/5% CO2; Matheson,
Mississauga, ON). The portal vein was perfused with a
Ca2+- free buffer [preperfusion buffer,
consisting of Hanks' buffer (137 mM NaCl, 5.4 mM KCl, 0.5 mM
NaH2PO4
2H2O, 0.42 mM
Na2HPO4.12
H2O), plus 10 mM HEPES (pH 7.2), 0.5 mM EGTA, 4.2 mM NaHCO3, 5 mM glucose, and 0.65% BSA] in a
single pass fashion at 30 ml/min for 10 min. Hepatocytes from all zones
of the liver were prepared by perfusion with collagenase (Hanks'
buffer with 4 mM CaCl2 and 0.05% collagenase),
which recirculated through the liver for 7 to 9 min at the flow rate of
25 ml/min. Zonally isolated hepatocytes were harvested following the
procedure of Lindros and Penttïla (1985)
by zone-selective
destruction with digitonin. The enrichment of hepatocyte populations
was verified by marker enzymes (Tan et al., 1999
): the activity of the
PP marker enzyme alanine aminotransferase was found to be 2.13 ± 1.0 times higher in PP hepatocytes (433 ± 165 nmol/min/mg
protein) than in PV hepatocytes (203 ± 58 nmol/min/mg protein).
Conversely, glutamine synthetase, an enzyme expressed exclusively in
the distal PV hepatocytes, exhibited significantly lower activity in PP
hepatocytes (0.15 ± 0.1 nmol/min/mg protein) than in PV
preparations (34.5 ± 10.6 nmol/min/mg protein) (ANOVA P < .05); the PP/PV ratio was 0.0043 ± 0.03.
Kinetic Uptake Studies. Hepatocyte suspensions (1 ml of 2 × 106 cells/ml) were preincubated in a rotating water bath for 10 min at 37°C. Aliquots (500 µl) of the suspension were added to 100 µl of various solutions containing enalapril, tracer [3H]enalapril, and [14C]sucrose (an extracellular marker) in 1.15% KCl to result in enalapril concentrations of 1 to 750 µM in 1.67 × 106 cells/ml. After admixture, samples (100 µl) were retrieved over 1 min and centrifuged immediately (9650g) for rapid filtration through a layer of silicon oil, separating the hepatocytes from the extracellular medium. Samples were taken from both the supernatant and cell pellet for liquid scintillation counting (Model LS 6800; Beckman Canada, Mississauga, ON).
Inhibitor Uptake Studies. The ability of benzoic acid (100 µM), harmol sulfate (200 µM), estrone-3-sulfate (100 µM), or the dipeptides, alanine-proline (400 µM) and enalaprilat (400 µM), to cis-inhibit enalapril uptake was examined by individually adding the compounds to the enalapril solution before the addition to hepatocytes. The metabolic inhibitor KCN (2 mM), the anion transport inhibitor, DIDS (2 mM), and the Na+/K+ ATPase inhibitor, ouabain (1 mM), were added to the cell suspension during the last 2 min of the 10-min hepatocyte preincubation interval, whereas the metabolic inhibitor, rotenone (30 µM), was added to the hepatocyte suspensions for preincubation for 30 min before the addition of enalapril. An equivalent volume of buffer was added for the control samples. All control samples were preincubated for 10 min except for the controls for rotenone, which were preincubated for 30 min. In all cases, the final concentration in the incubation mixture was 1 µM enalapril and 1.67 × 106 cells/ml. Data for the effects of treatment were expressed as percentages of the uptake rates of the controls.
Western Blot.
Cells were pelleted from zonal hepatocyte suspensions and frozen at
70°C until use. Cells were then extracted with
Na2CO3 to remove the
loosely associated membrane proteins according to a previously
described method (Bergwerk et al., 1996
), with modifications. Briefly,
cell pellets were suspended in 28 ml of 0.1 mM
Na2CO3 containing the
following mixture of protease inhibitors: 20 µg/ml BAME
(N
-p-benzyl-L-arginine-methyl
ester); 20 µg/ml soybean trypsin inhibitor; 20 µg/ml TAME
(N
-p-tosyl-L-arginine-methyl
ester); 1 µg/ml leupeptin; 1 mM phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride; 2 µg/ml aprotinin; 1 mM EDTA; and 5 mM EGTA. The suspension was rotated at 4°C for 15 min and then centrifuged at 4°C for 1 h at
100,000g. The resulting pellet was resuspended in 0.4 ml of
PBS by mild sonication. Protein concentration was determined by the BCA
protein assay (Pierce, Rockford, IL) using BSA as standard. Immunoblot was performed using an antibody prepared to a synthetic peptide corresponding to a region of Oatp1 near the carboxy terminus as previously described (Bergwerk et al., 1996
).
Kinetic Analysis. The [14C]sucrose counts associated with the pellet accounted for the volume of extracellular medium entrapped by hepatocytes. The uptake of [3H]enalapril was thus corrected for the extracellular counts entrapped, and the specific activity of the radiolabeled enalapril was used to calculate the rate of enalapril uptake. The cumulative amounts taken up into cells (nmol/106 cells), after correction for the entrapped extracellular components, were plotted against the incubation time. Linear regression of the data yielded the slope that represents the initial uptake rate (v). When v was plotted against the corresponding concentration [S], the kinetic constants were obtained by regression of v versus [S] according to the following equations:
For a system consisting of a single Michaelis-Menten component,
|
(1) |
|
(2) |
|
(3) |
Fitting and Data Handling. Data on the slopes (v) from each experiment were fitted individually to eq. 1, 2, or 3 by an iterative nonlinear least square procedure (Scientist v.2; Micromath Scientific Software, Salt Lake City, UT). Kinetic uptake data for each experiment were fit to all three equations. The Model Selection Criteria was used to determine the appropriateness of the equations: the greater the Model Selection Criteria value for a model, the better that model describes the data. A weighting scheme of 1/(observation)2 was used because this provided the best fit. The goodness of fit was judged by the S.D. of the parameter estimate or the c.v. (S.D./parameter estimate), residual plots, and the residual sum of squares.
Statistics. The data were presented as mean ± S.D. The means were compared by use of ANOVA or the paired t statistic accordingly, with P = .05 denoting the level of significance.
| |
Results |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Enalapril Uptake by Oatp1, Oatp2, and OATP.
The uptake of [3H]enalapril (5 µM) by Oatp2
and OATP was not significantly different from that of the control (Fig.
1). By contrast, uptake was significantly
higher for Oatp1 in comparison to the control, as found previously
(Pang et al., 1998
).
|
Enalapril Uptake into Hepatocytes. Transport of enalapril among all hepatocyte preparations was linear over 1 min for all concentrations (see Fig. 2 for representative study). Similar saturation curves for enalapril uptake were evident with rat hepatocytes isolated from whole liver, in the presence and absence of sodium ion (Fig. 3), and with PP and PV hepatocytes (Fig. 4). The best fit in all cases was eq. 1, which described a single saturable component. The fitted Vmax value in the presence of sodium for hepatocytes from whole liver was 11 ± 1.5 nmol/min/106 cells, and the Km value was 344 ± 52 µM. These values did not differ from those obtained for the uptake of enalapril in absence of sodium ion (Vmax value of 11.6 ± 4.2 nmol/min/106 cells and Km value of 446 ± 179 µM), and were similar to those for PP and PV cells (Vmax value of 9.5 ± 2.8 and 10.4 ± 2.0 nmol/min/106 cells, and Km values of 461 ± 177 and 411 ± 50 µM; P > .05, ANOVA, Table 1).
|
|
|
|
Inhibitor Uptake Studies.
The uptake of 1 µM enalapril was unaffected by the metabolic
inhibitors KCN (2 mM) and rotenone (30 µM) (P > .05, paired t test, Fig. 5). In
addition, benzoic acid (100 µM), enalaprilat (400 µM), and
alanine-proline (400 µM) failed to affect the uptake of enalapril
(P > .05, paired t test, Fig. 5). However,
the anion transport inhibitor DIDS (2 mM), temperature reduction, the
Oatp1 substrate estrone-3-sulfate (100 µM) (Bossuyt et al., 1996
),
and surprisingly, harmol sulfate (200 µM), all significantly
inhibited enalapril uptake (P < .05, paired
t test, Fig. 5). Unexpectedly, ouabain (1 mM), another Oatp1
substrate (Noé et al., 1997
), failed to exert a significant
effect on the uptake of enalapril. This may be due to the high
Km value of ouabain (1700-3000 µM)
(Noé et al., 1997
; Reichel et al., 1999
) and to the variability
in the data (Fig. 5).
|
Western Blotting. The expression of Oatp1 in PP and PV hepatocytes, quantified by Western blot analysis, was similar (Fig. 6); integration of the optical density of the immunoreactive proteins revealed similar intensities of 0.79 ± 0.13 and 0.88 ± 0.33 for the PP and PV regions, respectively (P > .05, ANOVA).
|
| |
Discussion |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Oatp1 and Oatp2 (Jacquemin et al., 1994
; Noé et al., 1997
),
the sodium/taurocholate cotransporting polypeptide (Hagenbuch et al.,
1991
), and the organic anion transporter 2 (Oat2) (Sekine et al., 1998
)
are cloned proteins expressed on the rat hepatocyte basolateral
membrane that are capable of transporting organic anions. Presently, we
confirmed that sodium ion is not involved in the transport of enalapril
in isolated rat hepatocytes (Table 1), excluding the role of
sodium/taurocholate cotransporting polypeptide, as shown earlier (Pang
et al., 1998
). Moreover, uptake is not mediated by Oatp2, which is
known to transport other anions such as the estrogen conjugates,
estradiol 17
-glucuronide and estrone 3-sulfate (Noé et al.,
1997
), pravastatin (Tokui et al., 1999
), bile acids, digoxin, and
thyroxine (Kakyo et al., 1999
; Reichel et al., 1999
). Our observations
conform to a recent observation on the lack of correlation of Oatp1 and
Oatp2 substrate specificity (Reichel et al., 1999
).
Structurally, enalapril is a modified dipeptide of alanine-proline.
Both enalapril and alanine-proline have been reported to be substrates
of the oligopeptide transporter PepT1 expressed in the rat intestine
and kidney (Saito et al., 1995
). A second isoform expressed in rat
kidney, PepT2, however, does not transport enalapril (Boll et al.,
1996
). On examination of the inhibitory action of alanine-proline on
enalapril uptake, none was found (Fig. 5). Enalaprilat, the active
metabolite of enalapril and also an ala-pro analog, was unable to
inhibit enalapril uptake into hepatocytes as well (Fig. 5). These
observations are consistent with enalapril not being a substrate of
PepT1 and PepT2, and that enalaprilat is neither a substrate of Oatp1
nor an inhibitor of enalapril transport in Oatp1-expressing HeLa cells
(Pang et al., 1998
). However, it was observed that enalaprilat was
effective in inhibiting the transport of another ACE inhibitor,
temocaprilat, into rat hepatocytes by processes that are mediated, in
part, by Oatp1 (Ishizuka et al., 1998
). As both enalaprilat and
temocaprilat are dicarboxylic acids and enalapril is a monocarboxylic
acid, it is plausible that enalapril and temocaprilat bind to different areas of Oatp1, explaining the differences in their susceptibility to
enalaprilat inhibition.
To further explore the role of other transporters, we used
substrates/inhibitors to effect cis-inhibition of enalapril
transport into hepatocytes. There was expressed sensitivity toward the
anion transport inhibitor, DIDS, which diminished enalapril uptake
(Fig. 5), as expected for the behavior of an Oatp1 substrate (Pang et al., 1998
; Tan et al., 1999
). Estrone-3-sulfate, a known substrate of
Oatp1 (Bossuyt et al., 1996
) significantly reduced enalapril uptake
(Fig. 5). Ouabain, another Oatp1 substrate (Noé et al., 1997
),
failed to affect the uptake of enalapril (Fig. 5), although ouabain (1 mM) was known to inhibit the activity of
Na+/K+ ATPase at similar
concentrations (Sillau et al., 1996
). The lack of inhibition with
ouabain was also observed for BSP in isolated hepatocytes (Schwenk et
al., 1976
) and Oatp1-cDNA transfected into Xenopus laevis
oocytes (Kullak-Ublick et al., 1994
), and for its glutathione conjugate
(BSPGSH) (Schwarz et al., 1980
), another Oatp1 substrate (Pang et al.,
1998
). Absence of inhibition may be due to the variability in the data
and the relatively low affinity of ouabain for Oatp1
(Km value of 1700-3000 µM) (Noé et
al., 1997
; Reichel et al., 1999
) compared with that for enalapril (Km value of 350-440 µM). Oatp2 will
likely play a more important role than Oatp1 in the hepatic uptake of
ouabain (Noé et al., 1997
).
Although Oatp1 transport appears to be independent of ATP hydrolysis
(Li et al., 1998
), uptake may be affected when intracellular ATP is
depleted. Uptake was further characterized with respect to temperature.
An energy dependence was inferred because uptake was reduced
drastically when the temperature was lowered (Fig. 5). However, the
metabolic inhibitors rotenone (30 µM, preincubated for 30 min) and
KCN (2 mM) were unable to reduce enalapril uptake in these studies. The
lack of effect of rotenone or potassium cyanide on enalapril uptake is
unexpected, because rotenone (30 µM) was known to reduce ATP levels
by 90% when preincubated with hepatocytes over 30 min (Yamazaki et
al., 1993
). Indeed, conflicting results concerning the effects of
cellular ATP depletion on Na+-independent organic
anion uptake have been reported. Variations existed due to differences
in the method used for ATP depletion and the time over which uptake was
determined (Yamazaki et al., 1993
). BSPGSH uptake was insensitive to
the effects of rotenone (Schwarz et al., 1980
). BSP uptake was found to
be unaffected by the metabolic inhibitors antimycin A, rotenone, and
carbonylcyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone (Schwenk et al.,
1976
), although uptake was reduced when 2-deoxyglucose and sodium azide
were used for ATP depletion via glycolysis and mitochondrial
respiration in hepatocytes (Yamazaki et al., 1993
) and Oatp1-expressing
HeLa cells (Shi et al., 1995
). Uptake of temocaprilat, measured over 90 s, was inhibited by the electron transport inhibitor, rotenone (Ishizuka et al., 1998
). The discrepancies are possibly explained by
the fact that uptake of both temocaprilat and BSP are only partly
mediated by Oatp1 in hepatocytes (Hagenbuch et al., 1996
; Ishizuka et
al., 1998
).
There exist other sodium-independent systems on the basolateral
membrane of hepatocytes that could potentially transport enalapril. Benzoic acid, a putative substrate of the monocarboxylate transporter MCT2 (Garcia et al., 1995
) and not of Oatp1 (Pang et al., 1998
), failed
to inhibit enalapril uptake (Fig. 5). The drug sulfate conjugate,
harmol sulfate, which is transported into hepatocytes via an unknown
mechanism, was inhibitory although harmol sulfate was not transported
by Oatp1-expressing HeLa cells (Pang et al., 1998
) and failed to
inhibit the uptake of estrone sulfate (Tan et al., 1999
). The recently
cloned novel liver-specific transport protein OAT2 (Sekine et al.,
1998
) that affects the uptake of salicylate,
PGE2, dicarboxylates, and
p-aminohippurate, is unlikely involved because there is
a lack of inhibition of Oat2 transport by enalapril, and there is no
known overlapping substrate specificity between Oat2 and Oatp1
(Kullak-Ublick et al., 1994
; Sekine et al., 1998
).
Inasmuch as Oatp1 is involved in the uptake of various
pharmacologically important peptides and steroids, it becomes important to characterize its zonal expression and acinar function. No difference was observed for uptake between hepatocytes prepared from the PP and PV
regions and whole rat liver (Fig. 4, Table 1). Additionally, Western
blot analysis revealed a lack of quantifiable difference between Oatp1
protein expression in PP and PV hepatocytes (Fig. 6). This observation
provides quantitative evidence for homogeneity of protein expression
and is consistent with prior observations of the lack of noticeable
unevenness in protein expression, qualitatively observed under confocal
microscopy (Bergwerk et al., 1996
), and findings of a lack of lobular
heterogeneity for Oatp1 mRNA as measured by in situ hybridization
(Dubuisson et al., 1996
; Angeletti et al., 1998
). By contrast, an
enriched midzonal-PV distribution of Oatp2 was suggested recently
(Kakyo et al., 1999
; Reichel et al., 1999
), and Oatp2 is not involved
in enalapril uptake (Fig. 1). Because activities in zonal hepatocytes
and Oatp1 are both homogeneously expressed across the acinus for the
uptake of enalapril, and because similar Km
values are obtained for both systems, it appears that Oatp1 is likely
the only transporter involved in the uptake of enalapril. Inasmuch as
the transport of enalapril into rat hepatocytes is an early and
mandatory process in the overall hydrolysis and excretion of both
enalapril and enalaprilat, which subsequently return to the venous
circulation, the PV preponderance in enalapril hydrolysis observed in
the intact liver (Pang et al., 1991
) may now be attributed to an
enrichment in intracellular metabolic activity and not transport in the
PV region. The PV preponderance of hydrolysis of enalapril by the
9000g supernatant fraction of hepatocyte homogenates has
recently been verified in incubation experiments (Abu-Zahra and Pang,
2000
).
In conclusion, we showed that enalapril uptake by isolated rat hepatocytes is sodium-independent and is best described by a single saturable component model with a Vmax value of 9.5 to 11.6 nmol/min/106 cells and a Km value of 344 to 461 µM. The uptake of enalapril and the expression of Oatp1 were both found to be homogeneous across the liver acinus. Uptake of enalapril by isolated rat hepatocytes is consistent with Oatp1-mediated transport.
| |
Acknowledgments |
|---|
We thank Eugene Tan and Dr. Rommel G. Tirona for their assistance in the preparation of the rat zonal hepatocytes.
| |
Footnotes |
|---|
Received December 28, 1999; accepted March 22, 2000.
This work was supported by the Medical Research Council of Canada [MT15657, MOP36,457 (K.S.P.)], and the National Institutes of Health [DK23026, DK41296 (A.W.W.), and GM54724 (R.B.K.)], and a grant from the Merck Sharp and Dohme Research Laboratories, West Point, PA (K.S.P.).
Send reprint requests to: Dr. K. S. Pang, Faculty of Pharmacy, University of Toronto, 19 Russell Street, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5S 2S2. E-mail: ks.pang{at}utoronto.ca
| |
Abbreviations |
|---|
Abbreviations used are: ACEi, angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor; BSP, bromosulfophthalein; Oatp1, organic anion transporting polypeptide 1 cloned from rat liver; OATP, organic anion transporting polypeptide cloned from human liver; PP, periportal; PV, perivenous; DIDS, 4,4'-diisothiocyanostilbene-2, 2'-disulfonic acid.
| |
References |
|---|
|
|
|---|
-ketoglutarate uptake: A histoautoradiographical study.
Hepatology
13:
247-253[Medline].This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
L. Liu, E. Mak, R. G. Tirona, E. Tan, P. M. Novikoff, P. Wang, A. W. Wolkoff, and K. S. Pang Vascular Binding, Blood Flow, Transporter, and Enzyme Interactions on the Processing of Digoxin in Rat Liver J. Pharmacol. Exp. Ther., October 1, 2005; 315(1): 433 - 448. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
L. Liu and K. S. Pang THE ROLES OF TRANSPORTERS AND ENZYMES IN HEPATIC DRUG PROCESSING Drug Metab. Dispos., January 1, 2005; 33(1): 1 - 9. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
N. Mizuno, T. Niwa, Y. Yotsumoto, and Y. Sugiyama Impact of Drug Transporter Studies on Drug Discovery and Development Pharmacol. Rev., September 1, 2003; 55(3): 425 - 461. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
R. Houle, J. Raoul, J.-F. Levesque, K. S. Pang, D. A. Nicoll-Griffith, and J. M. Silva Retention of Transporter Activities in Cryopreserved, Isolated Rat Hepatocytes Drug Metab. Dispos., April 1, 2003; 31(4): 447 - 451. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
E. Tan and K. S. Pang Sulfation is Rate Limiting in the Futile Cycling Between Estrone and Estrone Sulfate in Enriched Periportal and Perivenous Rat Hepatocytes Drug Metab. Dispos., March 1, 2001; 29(3): 335 - 346. [Abstract] [Full Text] |
||||
![]() |
T. N. Abu-Zahra and K. S. Pang Effect of Zonal Transport and Metabolism on Hepatic Removal: Enalapril Hydrolysis in Zonal, Isolated Rat Hepatocytes In Vitro and Correlation with Perfusion Data Drug Metab. Dispos., July 1, 2000; 28(7): 807 - 813. [Abstract] [Full Text] |
||||
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||