Hepatobiliary disposition of troglitazone and metabolites in rat and human sandwich-cultured hepatocytes: use of Monte Carlo simulations to assess the impact of changes in biliary excretion on troglitazone sulfate accumulation

大鼠和人类夹层培养肝细胞中曲格列酮及其代谢物的肝胆分布:使用蒙特卡罗模拟评估胆汁排泄变化对曲格列酮硫酸盐积累的影响

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作者:Jin Kyung Lee, Tracy L Marion, Koji Abe, Changwon Lim, Gary M Pollock, Kim L R Brouwer

Abstract

This study examined the hepatobiliary disposition of troglitazone (TGZ) and metabolites [TGZ sulfate (TS), TGZ glucuronide (TG), and TGZ quinone (TQ)] over time in rat and human sandwich-cultured hepatocytes (SCH). Cells were incubated with TGZ; samples were analyzed for TGZ and metabolites by liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry. SCH mimicked the disposition of TGZ/metabolites in vivo in rats and humans; TGZ was metabolized primarily to TS and to a lesser extent to TG and TQ. In human SCH, the biliary excretion index (BEI) was negligible for TGZ and TQ, approximately 16% for TS, and approximately 43% for TG over the incubation period; in rat SCH, the BEI for TS and TG was approximately 13 and approximately 41%, respectively. Hepatocyte accumulation of TS was extensive, with intracellular concentrations ranging from 132 to 222 microM in rat SCH; intracellular TGZ concentrations ranged from 7.22 to 47.7 microM. In human SCH, intracellular TS and TGZ concentrations ranged from 136 to 160 microM and from 49.4 to 84.7 microM, respectively. Pharmacokinetic modeling and Monte Carlo simulations were used to evaluate the impact of modulating the biliary excretion rate constant (K(bile)) for TS on TS accumulation in hepatocytes and medium. Simulations demonstrated that intracellular concentrations of TS may increase up to 3.1- and 5.7-fold when biliary excretion of TS was decreased 2- and 10-fold, respectively. It is important to note that altered hepatobiliary transport and the extent of hepatocyte exposure may not always be evident based on medium concentrations (analogous to systemic exposure in vivo). Pharmacokinetic modeling/simulation with data from SCH is a useful approach to examine the impact of altered hepatobiliary transport on hepatocyte accumulation of drug/metabolites.

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