4.6 Article

Interaction of fluvastatin with the liver-specific Na+-dependent taurocholate cotransporting polypeptide (NTCP)

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PHARMACEUTICAL SCIENCES
Volume 44, Issue 4, Pages 487-496

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.ejps.2011.09.009

Keywords

Transporters; NTCP; Statins; Pharmacokinetics

Funding

  1. Janssen Pharmaceutica NV

Ask authors/readers for more resources

It has been reported that polymorphisms in the organic anion transporting polypeptide 1B1 (OATP1B1, SLCO1B1) result in decreased hepatic uptake of simvastatin carboxy acid, the active metabolite of simvastatin. This is not the case for fluvastatin and it has been hypothesized that for this drug other hepatic uptake pathways exist. Here, we studied whether Na+-dependent taurocholate co-transporting polypeptide (NTCP, SLC10A1) can be an alternative hepatic uptake route for fluvastatin. Chinese Hamster Ovary cells transfected with human NTCP (CHO-NTCP) were used to investigate the inhibitory effect of fluvastatin and other statins on [H-3]-taurocholic acid uptake ([H-3]-TCA). Statin uptake by CHO-NTCP and cryo-preserved human hepatocytes was assessed via LC-MS/MS. Fluvastatin appeared to be a potent and competitive inhibitor of [H-3]-TCA uptake (IC50 of 40 mu M), pointing to an interaction at the level of the bile acid binding pocket of NTCP. The inhibitory action of other statins was also studied, which revealed that statin inhibitory potency increased with molecular descriptors of lipophilicity: calculated log P (r(2) = 0.82, p = 0.034), log D-7.4 (r(2) = 0.77, p = 0.0001). Studies in CHO-NTCP cells showed that fluvastatin was indeed an NTCP substrate (K-m 250 +/- 30 mu M, V-max 1340 +/- 50 ng/mg total cell protein/min). However, subsequent studies revealed that at clinically relevant plasma concentrations, NTCP contributed minimally to overall accumulation in human hepatocytes. In conclusion, fluvastatin interacts with NTCP at the level of the bile acid binding pocket and is an NTCP substrate. However, under normal conditions, NTCP-mediated uptake of this drug seems not to be a significant hepatocellular uptake pathway. (C) 2011 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available