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  • Title: Pretreatment with potent P-glycoprotein ligands may increase intestinal secretion in rats.
    Author: Hanafy A, Langguth P, Spahn-Langguth H.
    Journal: Eur J Pharm Sci; 2001 Feb; 12(4):405-15. PubMed ID: 11231107.
    Abstract:
    The expression of P-glycoprotein is induced in cell cultures upon exposure to various inducers. Therefore, the aim of the present study was to evaluate the in-vivo relevance of this observation, i.e. the influence of chronic pretreatments with selected drugs -- all of which are ligands to P-glycoprotein (P-gp) as demonstrated in radioligand binding studies and all of which have some or a considerable effect on P-gp expression in Caco-2 cells -- on the effective intestinal permeabilities of the model compound talinolol in rats employing in-situ single-pass intestinal perfusion of three different gut segments. Talinolol was selected, because it shows high selectivity for one of the exsorptive transporters (P-gp) and its intestinal permeability is very sensitive to changes in exsorption when the perfusate concentration is low. Prior to the induction study the perfusion model was optimized regarding the type and concentration of a competitive inhibitor which may be used to block the exsorption-related permeability reduction (through intestinal exsorption) during an ongoing perfusion and would permit an intra-individual comparison of the effective permeability without and with blockade of exsorption. While repetitive verapamil and talinolol dosing had no statistically significant exsorption-inducing effect, vinblastine and rifampicin pretreatments resulted in decreased intestinal talinolol permeabilities in the three tested gut segments, duodenum, jejunum, and colon [e.g., S-talinolol in jejunum: control, 2.50 x 10(-4) cm/s; vinblastine induction, 1.48 x 10(-4) cm/s (P<0.05); rifampicin induction, 1.51 x 10(-4) cm/s (P<0.05)]. Addition of an efficient secretion inhibitor (vinblastine) to the perfusate permitted the determination of the impact of inhibitable secretory processes on the total effective permeabilities and an estimation of passive permeability in the respective individual. The inhibitable permeability fractions were higher for vinblastine than for any other pretreatment and the difference from control pretreatment was statistically significant for all intestinal segments (duodenum, 61.8%; jejunum, 63.1%; colon, 43,7%; S-talinolol). Statistically significant differences were also detected for rifampicin in the perfused duodenum and jejunum (33.1 and 27.5% increase in inhibitable fraction, respectively, for S-talinolol). These differences are explained by a significant induction of outside-directed transport in the intestinal enterocytes by vinblastine and rifampicin.
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