4.7 Article

OCTN2-Mediated Acetyl-L-Carnitine Transport in Human Pulmonary Epithelial Cells In Vitro

Journal

PHARMACEUTICS
Volume 11, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/pharmaceutics11080396

Keywords

organic cation transporter; OCTN2; lung epithelium; acetyl-L-carnitine; epithelial transport; asthma; in vitro models

Funding

  1. Science Foundation Ireland Strategic Research Cluster grant under the National Development Plan - EU Structural Funds [07/SRC/B1154]
  2. SFI
  3. Iraqi Ministry of Higher Education and Scientific Research (MOHESR)

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The carnitine transporter OCTN2 is associated with asthma and other inflammatory diseases. The aims of this work were (i) to determine carnitine uptake into freshly isolated human alveolar type I (ATI)-like epithelial cells in primary culture, (ii) to compare the kinetics of carnitine uptake between respiratory epithelial in vitro cell models, and (iii) to establish whether any cell line was a suitable model for studies of carnitine transport at the air-blood barrier. Levels of time-dependent [H-3]-acetyl-L-carnitine uptake were similar in ATI-like, NCl-H441, and Calu-3 epithelial cells, whereas uptake into A549 cells was -5 times higher. Uptake inhibition was more pronounced by OCTN2 modulators, such as L-Carnitine and verapamil, in ATI-like primary epithelial cells compared to NCl-H441 and Calu-3 epithelial cells. Our findings suggest that OCTN2 is involved in the cellular uptake of acetyl-L-carnitine at the alveolar epithelium and that none of the tested cell lines are optimal surrogates for primary cells.

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