TY - JOUR T1 - Rosuvastatin Liver Partitioning in Cynomolgus Monkeys: Measurement In Vivo and Prediction Using In Vitro Monkey Hepatocyte Uptake JF - Drug Metabolism and Disposition JO - Drug Metab Dispos SP - 1788 LP - 1794 DO - 10.1124/dmd.115.065946 VL - 43 IS - 11 AU - Bridget L. Morse AU - Hong Cai AU - Jamus G. MacGuire AU - Maxine Fox AU - Lisa Zhang AU - Yueping Zhang AU - Xiaomei Gu AU - Hong Shen AU - Elizabeth A. Dierks AU - Hong Su AU - Chiuwa E. Luk AU - Punit Marathe AU - Yue-Zhong Shu AU - W. Griffith Humphreys AU - Yurong Lai Y1 - 2015/11/01 UR - http://dmd.aspetjournals.org/content/43/11/1788.abstract N2 - Unbound plasma concentrations may not reflect those in target tissues, and there is a need for methods to predict tissue partitioning. Here, we investigate the unbound liver partitioning (Kpu,u) of rosuvastatin, a substrate of hepatic organic anion transporting peptides, in cynomolgus monkeys and compare it with that determined using hepatocytes in vitro. Rosuvastatin (3 mg/kg) was administered orally to monkeys and plasma and liver (by ultrasound-guided biopsy) collected over time. Uptake into monkey hepatocytes was evaluated up to steady state. Binding in monkey plasma, liver, and hepatocytes was determined using equilibrium dialysis. Mean in vivo Kpu,u was 118 after correcting total liver partitioning by plasma and liver binding. In vitro uptake data were analyzed by compartmental modeling to determine active uptake clearance, passive diffusion, the intracellular unbound fraction, and Kpu,u. In vitro Kpu,u underpredicted that in vivo, resulting in the need for an empirical in vitro to in vivo scaling factor of 10. Adjusting model parameters using hypothetical scaling factors for transporter expression and surface area or assuming no effect of protein binding on active transport increased partitioning values by 1.1-, 6-, and 9-fold, respectively. In conclusion, in vivo rosuvastatin unbound liver partitioning in monkeys was underpredicted using hepatocytes in vitro. Modeling approaches that allow integrating corrections from passive diffusion or protein binding on active uptake could improve the estimation of in vivo intracellular partitioning of this organic anion transporting peptide substrate. A similar assessment of other active hepatic transport mechanisms could confirm and determine the extent to which limited accumulation in isolated hepatocytes needs to be considered in drug development. ER -