4.7 Article

Metformin Is a Substrate and Inhibitor of the Human Thiamine Transporter, THTR-2 (SLC19A3)

Journal

MOLECULAR PHARMACEUTICS
Volume 12, Issue 12, Pages 4301-4310

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.molpharmaceut.5b00501

Keywords

metformin; THTR-2; SLC19A3; drug and vitamin interaction

Funding

  1. U.S. Food and Drug Administration [FD004979]
  2. NIH [GM61390, GM117163]
  3. Burroughs Wellcome Fund (BWF) [1012485]
  4. National Institutes of Health Training Grant [T32 GM007175]
  5. China Scholarship Council

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The biguanide metformin is widely used as first-line therapy for the treatment of type 2 diabetes. Predominately a cation at physiological pH's, metformin is transported by membrane transporters, which play major roles in its absorption and disposition. Recently, our laboratory demonstrated that organic cation transporter 1, OCT1, the major hepatic uptake transporter for metformin, was also the primary hepatic uptake transporter for thiamine, vitamin B1. In this study, we tested the reverse, i.e., that metformin is a substrate of thiamine transporters (THTR-1, SLC19A2, and THTR-2, SLC19A3). Our study demonstrated that human THTR-2 (hTHTR-2), SLC19A3, which is highly expressed in the small intestine, but not hTHTR-1, transports metformin (K-m = 1.15 +/- 0.2 mM) and other cationic compounds (MPP+ and famotidine). The uptake mechanism for hTHTR-2 was pH and electrochemical gradient sensitive. Furthermore, metformin as well as other drugs including phenformin, chloroquine, verapamil, famotidine, and amprolium inhibited hTHTR-2 mediated uptake of both thiamine and metformin. Species differences in the substrate specificity of THTR-2 between human and mouse orthologues were observed. Taken together, our data suggest that hTHTR-2 may play a role in the intestinal absorption and tissue distribution of metformin and other organic cations and that the transporter may be a target for drug-drug and drug-nutrient interactions.

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