The muscarinic antagonists oxybutynin and trospium are used as spasmolytic agents for the treatment of overactive urinary bladder disease. Recently, it has been shown that trospium, but not oxybutynin, is a substrate of the multidrug efflux carrier P-glycoprotein, but carrier-mediated drug uptake has not been directly analysed for both drugs. However, trospium has been previously shown to exhibit inhibitory potency for the organic cation transporters (OCTs). The aim of the present study was to examine whether trospium and oxybutynin are substrates, i.e. are transported by the human OCTs (hOCT(1), hOCT(2) and hOCT(3)). Therefore, we measured total and specific (decynium-22-sensitive) uptake, and saturation kinetics of the uptake for [(3)H]oxybutynin and [(3)H]trospium in human embryonic kidney (HEK293) cells transiently transfected with the cDNA of hOCT(1), hOCT(2) or hOCT(3). In addition, we determined IC(50) values for inhibition of hOCT-mediated [(3)H]MPP(+) uptake by unlabelled trospium and oxybutynin. Total uptake of [(3)H]oxybutynin was very high in all transfected HEK293 cells and only a small portion was due to specific, decynium-22-sensitive hOCT-mediated uptake. Oxybutynin inhibited [(3)H]MPP(+) uptake by the three hOCTs with IC(50) values between 20 and 130 μM. Direct determination of transport kinetics was measurable only at hOCT(1) with K (m) of 8 μM and V (max) of 484 pmol/mg protein/min. The rank order of affinity (1/IC(50) or 1/K (m)) of specific oxybutynin uptake was hOCT(1) > hOCT(2) = hOCT(3). The observed high non-specific uptake is obviously a consequence of the high lipophilicity of this uncharged drug. Thus, hOCTs may not play a significant role for the overall pharmacokinetics and tissue distribution of oxybutynin. However, and in contrast to oxybutynin, uptake of [(3)H]trospium, an organic cation, was mainly due to carrier-mediated uptake by the three hOCTs. With IC(50) values of 18, 1.4 and 710 μM (at hOCT(1), hOCT(2) and hOCT(3), respectively) and K (m) values of 17 and 8 μM and about identical V (max) values of about 90 pmol/mg protein/min at hOCT(1) and hOCT(2), respectively; the rank order of affinity (1/IC(50) or 1/K (m)) of specific uptake of trospium was hOCT(2) > hOCT(1) > > hOCT(3). Thus, hOCTs very probably contribute to the active tubular and hepatobiliary secretion of trospium. Furthermore, hOCT(1) and hOCT(3) may be involved in the tissue uptake of this drug in the urinary bladder.
Due to their poor solubility during IEF membrane proteins cannot be separated and analyzed satisfactorily with classical 2-DE. A more efficient method for such hydrophobic proteins is the benzyldimethyl-n-hexadecylammonium chloride (16-BAC)/SDS-PAGE, but the corresponding protocol is intricate and time-consuming. We now developed an easy-to-handle electrophoresis method in connection with a novel device which enables reproducible separation of ionic solubilized membrane proteins using individually rehydrated plastic sheet gel strips. These strips are suitable for the first dimension in a 2-D 16-BAC/SDS system and can be handled easily; this is demonstrated by the separation of membrane proteins of human embryonic kidney (HEK293) cells.
The pharmacokinetics of tapentadol ER are consistent after repeated and single-dose administration. Tapentadol ER may be administered without regard to food intake. No clinically significant differences were observed in the pharmacokinetics of tapentadol between Japanese and Caucasian subjects.
The thiol reagent N-ethylmaleimide (NEM) is known to inhibit irreversibly ligand binding by the norepinephrine transporter (NET), while the simultaneous presence of NET substrates or ligands protects from this inhibition. Therefore, cysteine residues located within the substrate binding pocket of the NET were assumed to play an important role in ligand binding. To examine which (if any) of the 10 cysteines (Cys) of the human (h) NET might be involved in transport and/or binding function, we mutated all hNET cysteines to alanine. Using transfected HEK293 cells we studied NEM effects on the hNET with respect to [(3)H]nisoxetine binding. Two cysteines (Cys176 and Cys185) within the extracellular loop of the NET have been proposed to form a disulfide bond. We could demonstrate that this is of crucial importance as corresponding hNET mutants, in which these cysteines have been replaced, showed a lack of plasma membrane expression. However, due to their oxidized state in the native NET protein, Cys176 and Cys185 may not be targets for NEM. All other Cys-to-Ala hNET mutants were fully active and showed no change in inhibition of [(3)H]nisoxetine binding by NEM. These observations clearly exclude cysteines as being involved in hNET ligand binding. Since NEM also interacts with histidin (His), we mutated all 13 histidins of the hNET to alanine and examined the NET mutants in functional and binding assays. His222 within the large extracellular loop of the transporter was identified as an interaction partner of NEM since in the corresponding hNET mutant NEM exhibited a significantly reduced inhibitory potency. Furthermore, we could show that histidins in position 296, 370 and 372 are important for nisoxetine binding, while His220, 441, 598 and 599 are crucial for plasma membrane expression of the hNET.
The haloalkylamine DSP4 (N[-2-chloroethyl]-N-ethyl-2-bromobenzylamine) is a noradrenergic neurotoxin, which is used for the chemical denervation of noradrenergic neurons, and it has been proposed to be a selective substrate for the neuronal, Na(+)- and Cl(-)-dependent noradrenaline transporter (NAT). In the present study, we investigated whether DSP4 not only interacts with the human NAT (hNAT) but also with other neuronal monoamine transporters such as the transporters for dopamine (hDAT) and serotonin (hSERT) or with nonneuronal (Na(+)-independent) monoamine transporters also known as organic cation transporters (OCTs), such as hOCT(1), hOCT(2), and hOCT(3). Using human embryonic kidney HEK293 cells heterologously expressing the corresponding transporter, we show that DSP4 irreversibly inhibits the hNAT, hDAT, hSERT, and hOCT(3). However, this inhibition includes a reversible component at the hDAT, hSERT, and hOCT(3) but not at the hNAT. The inhibitory potency of DSP4 at the neuronal transporters was highest at the hNAT (IC(50) about 5 microM), and it was about five and 40 times lower at the hSERT and hDAT, respectively. DSP4 inhibited all three hOCTs with high potency (IC(50) about 1 microM) but in a completely reversible manner at hOCT(1) and hOCT(2). Cytotoxicity by 24-h exposure of hNAT- or hOCT-expressing cells to low DSP4 concentrations (<10 microM) could be observed only in hNAT-expressing cells. Thus, DSP4's high-affinity uptake through the NAT together with its completely irreversible mode of interaction with the NAT may contribute to its selectivity as noradrenergic neurotoxin.
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