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Biliary Excretion Mediated by P-Glycoprotein

a homologue of MDR1, is responsible for the biliary excretion of phospholipids, and a hereditary defect in this gene results in the acquisition of progressive familial intrahepatic cholestasis Type 3 [80-82]. [Pg.294]

Biliary Excretion Mediated by Multidrug Resistance-Associated Protein 2 (MRP2) [Pg.294]

It is important to establish an in vitro system which will allow in vivo transport across the bile canalicular membrane to be predicted quantitatively. By comparing the transport activity between in vivo and in vitro situations in isolated bile canalicular membrane vesicles, it has been shown that there is a significant correlation for nine types of substrates [90]. Here, in vivo transport activity was defined as the biliary excretion rate, divided by the unbound hepatic concentration at steady-state, whereas in vitro transport activity was defined as the initial velocity for the transport into the isolated bile canalicular membrane vesicles divided by the medium concentration [90]. Collectively, it is possible to predict in vivo canalicular transport from in vitro experiments with the isolated bile canalicular membrane vesicles. [Pg.295]

From this viewpoint, it is interesting to examine ligand transport in isolated bile [Pg.295]

It is also important to predict the in vivo biliary excretion clearance in humans, and for this purpose MDCK II cell lines expressing both uptake and efflux transporters may be used (Fig. 12.3) [92, 93]. It has been shown that MRP2 is expressed on the apical membrane, whereas OATP2 and 8 are expressed on the basolateral membrane after cDNA transfection (Fig. 12.3) [92, 93]. The transcellular transport across such double-transfected cells may correspond to the excretion of ligands from blood into bile across hepatocytes. Indeed, the vectorial transport from the basal to apical side was observed for pravastatin only in OATP2- and MRP2-expressing [Pg.296]




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P-glycoprotein

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