Protein Expression and Functional Relevance of Efflux and Uptake Drug Transporters at the Blood-Brain Barrier of Human Brain and Glioblastoma.
Department
Neurosurgery
Document Type
Article
Abstract
The knowledge of transporter protein expression and function at the human blood-brain barrier (BBB) is critical to prediction of drug BBB penetration and design of strategies for improving drug delivery to the brain or brain tumor. This study determined absolute transporter protein abundances in isolated microvessels of human normal brain (N = 30), glioblastoma (N = 47), rat (N = 10) and mouse brain (N = 10), and cell membranes of MDCKII cell lines, using targeted proteomics. In glioblastoma microvessels, efflux transporters (ABCB1 and ABCG2), monocarboxylate transporter 1 (MCT1), glucose transporter 1 (GLUT1), sodium-potassium pump (Na/K ATPase), and Claudin-5 protein levels were significantly reduced, while large neutral amino acid transporter 1 (LAT1) was increased and GLU3 remained the same, as compared with human normal brain microvessels. ABCC4, OATP1A2, OATP2B1, and OAT3 were undetectable in microvessels of both human brain and glioblastoma. Species difference in BBB transporter abundances was noted. Cellular permeability experiments and modeling simulations suggested that not a single apical uptake transporter but a vectorial transport system consisting of an apical uptake transporter and basolateral efflux mechanism was required for efficient delivery of poor transmembrane permeability drugs from the blood to brain.
Publication Date
5-1-2020
Publication Title
Clinical pharmacology and therapeutics
ISSN
1532-6535
Volume
107
Issue
5
First Page
1116
Last Page
1127
PubMed ID
31664714
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
10.1002/cpt.1710
Recommended Citation
Bao, Xun; Wu, Jianmei; Xie, Youming; Kim, Seongho; Michelhaugh, Sharon; Jiang, Jun; Mittal, Sandeep; Sanai, Nader; and Li, Jing, "Protein Expression and Functional Relevance of Efflux and Uptake Drug Transporters at the Blood-Brain Barrier of Human Brain and Glioblastoma." (2020). Neurosurgery. 634.
https://scholar.barrowneuro.org/neurosurgery/634