Evaluation of In Vitro Models for Assessment of Human Intestinal Metabolism in Drug Discovery

被引:19
|
作者
Davies, Mari [1 ]
Peramuhendige, Prabha [1 ]
King, Lloyd [1 ]
Golding, Melanie [1 ]
Kotian, Apoorva [1 ]
Penney, Mark [1 ]
Shah, Syeda [1 ]
Manevski, Nenad [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] UCB Celltech UK, Slough, Berks, England
[2] F Hoffmann La Roche Ltd, Basel, Switzerland
关键词
CRYOPRESERVED HUMAN ENTEROCYTES; PRECISION-CUT SLICES; GUT WALL METABOLISM; 1ST-PASS METABOLISM; P-GLYCOPROTEIN; MICROSOMAL BINDING; CYNOMOLGUS MONKEY; HUMAN HEPATOCYTES; RESPONSE FACTORS; PREDICTION;
D O I
10.1124/dmd.120.000111
中图分类号
R9 [药学];
学科分类号
1007 ;
摘要
Although intestinal metabolism plays an important role in drug disposition, early predictions of human outcomes are challenging, in part because of limitations of available in vitro models. To address this, we have evaluated three in vitro models of human intestine (microsomes, permeabilized enterocytes, and cryopreserved intestinal mucosal epithelium) as tools to assess intestinal metabolism and estimate the fraction escaping gut metabolism (f(g)) in drug discovery. The models were tested with a chemically diverse set of 32 compounds, including substrates for oxidoreductive, hydrolytic, and conjugative enzymes. Liquid chromatography-high-resolution mass spectrometry was used to quantify substrate disappearance [intrinsic clearance (CLint)] and qualify metabolite formation (quantitative-qualitative bioanalysis). Fraction unbound in the incubation (f(u,inc)) was determined by rapid equilibrium dialysis. Measured in vitro results (CLint and f(u,inc)) were supplemented with literature data [passive Caco-2 apical to basolateral permeability, enterocyte blood flow, and intestinal surface area (A)] and combined using a midazolam-calibrated Q(gut) model to predict human f(g) values. All three models showed reliable CYP and UDP-glucuronosyltransferase activities, but enterocytes and mucosa may offer advantages for low-clearance compounds and alternative pathways (e.g., sulfation, hydrolases, and flavin-containing monooxigenases). Early predictions of human f(g) values were acceptable for the high-f(g) compounds (arbitrarily f(g) > 0.7). However, predictions of low- and moderate-f(g) values (arbitrarily f(g) < 0.7) remain challenging, indicating that further evaluation is needed (e.g., saturation effects and impact of transporters) but not immediate compound avoidance. Results suggest that tested models offer an additional value in drug discovery, especially for drug design and chemotype evaluation. Significance Statement We found that cellular models of the human gut (permeabilized enterocytes and cryopreserved intestinal mucosa) offer an alternative to and potential advantage over intestinal microsomes in studies of drug metabolism, particularly for low-clearance compounds and alternative pathways (e.g., sulfation, hydrolases, and flavin-containing monooxigenases). The predictivity of human fraction escaping gut metabolism for common CYP and UDP-glucuronosyltransferase substrates based on the Q(gut) model is still limited, however, and appropriate further evaluation is recommended.
引用
收藏
页码:1169 / 1182
页数:14
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Isolated enterocytes to study intestinal drug metabolism in vitro
    Bonnefille, P.
    Sezgin-Bayindir, Z.
    Belkhelfa, H.
    Arellano, C.
    Gandia, P.
    Woodley, J.
    Houin, G.
    FUNDAMENTAL & CLINICAL PHARMACOLOGY, 2009, 23 : 111 - 111
  • [22] In vitro models replicating the human intestinal epithelium for absorption and metabolism studies: A systematic review
    Fedi, Arianna
    Vitale, Chiara
    Ponschin, Giulia
    Ayehunie, Seyoum
    Fato, Marco
    Scaglione, Silvia
    JOURNAL OF CONTROLLED RELEASE, 2021, 335 : 247 - 268
  • [23] A comparative evaluation of models to predict human intestinal metabolism from nonclinical data
    Yau, Estelle
    Petersson, Carl
    Dolgos, Hugues
    Peters, Sheila Annie
    BIOPHARMACEUTICS & DRUG DISPOSITION, 2017, 38 (03) : 163 - 186
  • [24] Curcumin metabolism by human intestinal bacteria in vitro
    Niwa, Toshio
    Yokoyama, Shin-ichiro
    Mochizuki, Mika
    Osawa, Toshihiko
    JOURNAL OF FUNCTIONAL FOODS, 2019, 61
  • [25] In vitro models for early studies of drug metabolism
    Lin, JH
    Rodrigues, AD
    PHARMACOKINETIC OPTIMIZATION IN DRUG RESEARCH: BIOLOGICAL, PHYSICOCHEMICAL, AND COMPUTATIONAL STRATEGIES, 2001, : 217 - 243
  • [26] A microfluidic approach for in vitro assessment of interorgan interactions in drug metabolism using intestinal and liver slices
    van Midwoud, Paul M.
    Merema, Marjolijn T.
    Verpoorte, Elisabeth
    Groothuis, Geny M. M.
    LAB ON A CHIP, 2010, 10 (20) : 2778 - 2786
  • [27] Human carboxylesterase 1: from drug metabolism to drug discovery
    Redinbo, MR
    Bencharit, S
    Potter, PM
    BIOCHEMICAL SOCIETY TRANSACTIONS, 2003, 31 : 620 - 624
  • [28] Preclinical experimental models of drug metabolism and disposition in drug discovery and development
    Zhang, Donglu
    Luo, Gang
    Ding, Xinxin
    Lu, Chuang
    ACTA PHARMACEUTICA SINICA B, 2012, 2 (06) : 549 - 561
  • [29] Human HepaRG Hepatocytes, an Alternative In Vitro Model for Assessment of Drug Metabolism Induction
    Li, Ruoya
    Antherieu, Sebastien
    Turpeinen, Miia
    Camus, Sandrine
    Josse, Rozenn
    Uusitalo, Jouko
    Christiane, Guguen-Guillouzo
    Guillouzo, Andre
    Tolonen, Ari
    Rougier, Nathalie
    Chesne, Christophe
    DRUG METABOLISM REVIEWS, 2009, 41 : 57 - 57
  • [30] Regional Differences in Human Intestinal Drug Metabolism
    Iswandana, Raditya
    Irianti, Marina I.
    Oosterhuis, Dorenda
    Hofker, Hendrik S.
    Merema, Marjolijn T.
    de Jager, Marina H.
    Mutsaers, Henricus A. M.
    Olinga, Peter
    DRUG METABOLISM AND DISPOSITION, 2018, 46 (12) : 1879 - 1885