Affiliation:
1. Zhejiang Key Laboratory of Neuropsychiatric Drug Research, Hangzhou Medical College, Zhejiang Academy of Medical
Sciences, No. 182, Tianmu Shan Road, 310013 Hangzhou, China
Abstract
Background:
The research and development of drugs for the treatment of central nervous
system diseases faces many challenges at present. One of the most important questions to be
answered is, how does the drug cross the blood-brain barrier to get to the target site for pharmacological
action. Fluoxetine is widely used in clinical antidepressant therapy. However, the mechanism
by which fluoxetine passes through the BBB also remains unclear. Under physiological pH
conditions, fluoxetine is an organic cation with a relatively small molecular weight (<500), which
is in line with the substrate characteristics of organic cation transporters (OCTs). Therefore, this
study aimed to investigate the interaction of fluoxetine with OCTs at the BBB and BBB-associated
efflux transporters. This is of great significance for fluoxetine to better treat depression. Moreover,
it can provide a theoretical basis for clinical drug combination.
Methods:
In vitro BBB model was developed using human brain microvascular endothelial cells
(hCMEC/D3), and the cellular accumulation was tested in the presence or absence of transporter inhibitors.
In addition, an in vivo trial was performed in rats to investigate the effect of OCTs on the
distribution of fluoxetine in the brain tissue. Fluoxetine concentration was determined by a validated
UPLC-MS/MS method.
Results:
The results showed that amantadine (an OCT1/2 inhibitor) and prazosin (an OCT1/3 inhibitor)
significantly decreased the cellular accumulation of fluoxetine (P <.001). Moreover, we
found that N-methylnicotinamide (an OCT2 inhibitor) significantly inhibited the cellular uptake of
100 and 500 ng/mL fluoxetine (P <.01 and P <.05 respectively). In contrast, corticosterone (an OCT3
inhibitor) only significantly inhibited the cellular uptake of 1000 ng/mL fluoxetine (P <.05).
The P-glycoprotein (P-gp) inhibitor, verapamil, and the multidrug resistance associated proteins
(MRPs) inhibitor, MK571, significantly decreased the cellular uptake of fluoxetine. However, intracellular
accumulation of fluoxetine was not significantly changed when fluoxetine was incubated
with the breast cancer resistance protein (BCRP) inhibitor Ko143. Furthermore, in vivo experiments
proved that corticosterone and prazosin significantly inhibited the brain-plasma ratio of fluoxetine
at 5.5 h and 12 h, respectively.
Conclusion:
OCTs might play a significant role in the transport of fluoxetine across the BBB. In
addition, P-gp, BCRP, and MRPs seemed not to mediate the efflux transport of fluoxetine.
Publisher
Bentham Science Publishers Ltd.
Cited by
10 articles.
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