All Blood Brain Barrier Cell Types Demonstrate Capability to Influence Differential Tenofovir and Emtricitabine Metabolism and Transport in the Brain.

所有血脑屏障细胞类型均表现出影响替诺福韦和恩曲他滨在大脑中差异性代谢和转运的能力

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作者:Wilkins Hannah N, Knerler Stephen A, Warshanna Ahmed, Colón Ortiz Rodnie, Haas Kate, Orsburn Benjamin C, Williams Dionna W
The blood brain barrier (BBB) represents a significant obstacle in brain drug penetration that challenges efforts in the treatment of neurological disorders. Therapeutically targeting the brain requires interactions with each BBB cell type, including endothelial cells, pericytes, and astrocytes. Yet, the relative contribution of these BBB cell types to the mechanisms that facilitate brain drug disposition is not well characterized. Here, we use first-line antiretroviral therapies, tenofovir (TFV) and emtricitabine (FTC), as models to investigate the mechanisms of drug transport and metabolism at the BBB that may influence access of the drug to the brain. We evaluated regional and cell-type-specific drug metabolism and transport mechanisms using rhesus macaques and in vitro treatment of primary human cells. We report heterogeneous distribution of TFV, FTC, and their active metabolites, which cerebrospinal fluid measures could not reflect. We found that all BBB cell types possessed functional drug-metabolizing enzymes and transporters that promoted TFV and FTC uptake and pharmacologic activation. Pericytes and astrocytes emerged as pharmacologically dynamic cells that rival hepatocytes and were uniquely susceptible to modulation by disease and treatment. Together, our findings demonstrate the importance of considering the BBB as a unique pharmacologic entity rather than viewing it as an extension of the liver, as each cell type possesses distinct drug metabolism and transport capacities that contribute to differential brain drug disposition. Further, our work highlights pharmacologically active pathways at the BBB that may regulate brain drug disposition and impact therapeutic efforts to alleviate neurologic disease.

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