Tang Cuyue, Kuo Yuhsin, Pudvah Nicole T, Ellis Joan D, Michener Maria S, Egbertson Melissa, Graham Samuel L, Cook Jacquelynn J, Hochman Jerome H, Prueksaritanont Thomayant
Department of Drug Metabolism, Merck Research Laboratories, West Point, PA 19486, USA.
Biochem Pharmacol. 2009 Sep 15;78(6):642-7. doi: 10.1016/j.bcp.2009.05.026. Epub 2009 May 27.
Brain penetration of drugs which are subject to P-glycoprotein (Pgp)-mediated efflux is attenuated, as manifested by the fact that the cerebrospinal fluid concentration (C(CSF)), a good surrogate of the unbound brain concentration (C(ub)), is lower than the unbound plasma concentration (C(up)) for Pgp substrates. In rodents, the attenuation magnitude of brain penetration by Pgp-mediated efflux has been estimated by correlating the ratio of CSF to plasma exposures (C(CSF)/C(p)) with the unbound fraction in plasma (f(u)) upon the incorporation of the in vivo or in vitro Pgp-mediated efflux ratios (ERs). In the present work, we investigated the impact of Pgp-mediated efflux on C(CSF) in monkeys. Following intravenous administration to cisterna magna ported rhesus monkeys, the CSF and plasma concentrations were determined for 25 compounds from three discovery programs. We also evaluated their f(u) in rhesus plasma and ER in human and African green monkey MDR-transfected LLC-PK1 cells. These compounds varied significantly in the f(u) (0.025-0.73), and 24 out of 25 are considered Pgp substrates based on their appreciable directional transport (ER>2). The C(CSF)/C(p) was significantly lower than the corresponding f(u) (>or=3-fold) for 16 compounds regardless of a significant correlation (R(2)=0.59, p=4 x 10(-5)) when the C(CSF)/C(p) was plotted against the f(u). When the f(u) was normalized to the ER (f(u)/ER) the correlation was improved (R(2)=0.75, p=8 x 10(-8)). More importantly, only one compound showed the C(CSF)/C(p) that exceeded 3-fold of the normalized f(u). The results suggest that the impact of Pgp-mediated efflux in monkeys, similar to the case in rodents, is reasonably reflected by the gradient between the free concentrations in plasma and in CSF. Therefore, f(u) and Pgp ER may serve as useful measurements in estimating in vivo C(CSF)/C(p) ratios in monkeys, and potentially in humans.
受P-糖蛋白(Pgp)介导的外排作用影响的药物,其脑渗透率会降低,这表现为脑脊液浓度(C(CSF))低于Pgp底物的非结合血浆浓度(C(up)),而脑脊液浓度是未结合脑浓度(C(ub))的良好替代指标。在啮齿动物中,通过将脑脊液与血浆暴露量之比(C(CSF)/C(p))与血浆中的非结合分数(f(u))相关联,并纳入体内或体外Pgp介导的外排比率(ERs),来估算Pgp介导的外排对脑渗透率的衰减程度。在本研究中,我们调查了Pgp介导的外排在猴子体内对C(CSF)的影响。向经大池移植的恒河猴静脉给药后,测定了来自三个发现项目的25种化合物的脑脊液和血浆浓度。我们还评估了它们在恒河猴血浆中的f(u)以及在人源和非洲绿猴MDR转染的LLC-PK1细胞中的ER。这些化合物的f(u)差异显著(0.025 - 0.73),并且基于其明显的定向转运(ER>2),25种化合物中有24种被认为是Pgp底物。当将C(CSF)/C(p)与f(u)作图时,16种化合物的C(CSF)/C(p)显著低于相应的f(u)(>或 = 3倍),尽管存在显著相关性(R(2)=0.59,p = 4 x 10(-5))。当将f(u)归一化为ER(f(u)/ER)时,相关性得到改善(R(2)=0.75,p = 8 x 10(-8))。更重要的是,只有一种化合物的C(CSF)/C(p)超过了归一化f(u)的3倍。结果表明,与啮齿动物的情况类似,Pgp介导的外排在猴子体内的影响可以通过血浆和脑脊液中的游离浓度梯度合理反映出来。因此,f(u)和Pgp ER可作为估算猴子体内C(CSF)/C(p)比率以及潜在估算人类体内该比率的有用指标。