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In Vitro Hepatic Uptake in Human and Monkey Hepatocytes in the Presence and Absence of Serum Protein and Its In Vitro to In Vivo Extrapolation.

Authors :
Liang X
Park Y
DeForest N
Hao J
Zhao X
Niu C
Wang K
Smith B
Lai Y
Source :
Drug metabolism and disposition: the biological fate of chemicals [Drug Metab Dispos] 2020 Dec; Vol. 48 (12), pp. 1283-1292. Date of Electronic Publication: 2020 Oct 09.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

It is well documented that human hepatic clearance based on in vitro metabolism or transporter assays systematically resulted in underprediction; therefore, large empirical scalars are often needed in either static or physiologically based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) models to accurately predict human pharmacokinetics (PK). In our current investigation, we assessed hepatic uptake in hepatocyte suspension in Krebs-Henseleit buffer in the presence and absence of serum. The results showed that the unbound intrinsic active clearance (CL <subscript>u,int,active</subscript> ) values obtained by normalizing the unbound fraction in the buffer containing 10% serum were generally higher than the CL <subscript>u,int,active</subscript> obtained directly from protein free buffer, suggesting "protein-facilitated" uptake. The differences of CL <subscript>u,int,active</subscript> in the buffer with and without protein ranged from 1- to 925-fold and negatively correlated to the unbound serum binding of organic anion transporting polypeptide substrates. When using the uptake values obtained from buffer containing serum versus serum-free buffer, the median of scaling factors (SFs) for CL <subscript>u,int,active</subscript> reduced from 24.2-4.6 to 22.7-7.1 for human and monkey, respectively, demonstrating the improvement of in vitro to in vivo extrapolation in a PBPK model. Furthermore, values of CL <subscript>u,int,active</subscript> were significantly higher in monkey hepatocytes than that in human, and the species differences appeared to be compound dependent. Scaling up in vitro uptake values derived in assays containing species-specific serum can compensate for the species-specific variabilities when using cynomolgus monkey as a probe animal model. Incorporating SFs calibrated in monkey and together with scaled in vitro data can be a reliable approach for the prospective human PK prediction in early drug discovery. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT: We investigated the protein effect on hepatic uptake in human and monkey hepatocytes and improved the in vitro to in vivo extrapolation using parameters obtained from the incubation in the present of serum protein. In addition, significantly higher active uptake clearances were observed in monkey hepatocytes than in human, and the species differences appeared to be compound dependent. The physiologically based pharmacokinetic model that incorporates scaling factors calibrated in monkey and together with scaled in vitro human data can be a reliable approach for the prospective human pharmacokinetics prediction.<br /> (Copyright © 2020 by The American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1521-009X
Volume :
48
Issue :
12
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Drug metabolism and disposition: the biological fate of chemicals
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
33037043
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1124/dmd.120.000163