Okamura Noboru, Sakaeda Toshiyuki, Okumura Katsuhiko
Kobe University Graduate School of Medicine, Department of Clinical Evaluation of Pharmacotherapy, Kobe University Graduate School of Medicine, 1-5-6, Minatojima-minamimachi, Chuo-ku, Kobe 650-0047, Japan.
Kobe University, Department of Hospital Pharmacy, School of Medicine, Kobe University, 7-5-2, Kusunoki-cho, Chuo-ku, Kobe 650-0017, Japan.
Per Med. 2004 Dec;1(1):85-104. doi: 10.1517/17410541.1.1.85.
Drug-metabolizing enzymes, drug transporters and drug targets play significant roles as determinants of drug efficacy and toxicity. Their genetic polymorphisms often affect the expression and function of their products and are expected to become surrogate markers to predict the response to drugs in individual patients. With the sequencing of the human genome, it has been estimated that approximately 500-1200 genes code for drug transporters and, recently, there have been significant and rapid advances in the research on the relationships between genetic polymorphisms of drug transporters and interindividual variation of drug disposition. At present, the clinical studies of multi-drug resistance protein 1 (MDR1, P-glycoprotein, ABCB1), which belongs to the ATP-binding cassette (ABC) superfamily, are the most comprehensive among the ABC transporters, but clinical investigations on other drug transporters are currently being performed around the world. MDR1 can be said to be the most important drug transporter, since clinical reports have suggested that it regulates the disposition of various types of clinically important drugs, but in vitro investigations or animal experiments have strongly suggested that the members of the multi-drug resistance-associated protein (MRP) subfamily can also become key molecules for pharmacotherapy. In addition to those, breast cancer resistance protein (BCRP, ABCG2), another ABC transporter, is well known as a key molecule of multi-drug resistance to several anticancer agents. However, this review focuses on the latest information on the pharmacogenetics of the MDR and MRP subfamilies, and its impact on pharmacotherapy is discussed.
药物代谢酶、药物转运体和药物靶点作为药物疗效和毒性的决定因素发挥着重要作用。它们的基因多态性常常影响其产物的表达和功能,有望成为预测个体患者药物反应的替代标志物。随着人类基因组测序的完成,据估计大约有500 - 1200个基因编码药物转运体,最近,关于药物转运体基因多态性与药物处置个体差异之间关系的研究取得了重大且快速的进展。目前,属于ATP结合盒(ABC)超家族的多药耐药蛋白1(MDR1,P - 糖蛋白,ABCB1)的临床研究在ABC转运体中最为全面,但世界各地目前也正在对其他药物转运体进行临床研究。可以说MDR1是最重要的药物转运体,因为临床报告表明它调节各种临床上重要药物的处置,但体外研究或动物实验强烈表明多药耐药相关蛋白(MRP)亚家族的成员也可能成为药物治疗的关键分子。除此之外,另一种ABC转运体乳腺癌耐药蛋白(BCRP,ABCG2)是对几种抗癌药物产生多药耐药的关键分子。然而,本综述重点关注MDR和MRP亚家族药物遗传学的最新信息,并讨论其对药物治疗的影响。