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Role of P-glycoprotein in Drug Interactions

Role of P-glycoprotein in Drug Interactions

Role of P-glycoprotein in Drug Interactions

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P-glycoprotein Basics - The Cellular Bouncer

  • P-glycoprotein (P-gp) is an ATP-dependent efflux transporter protein.
  • Acts as a "cellular bouncer," actively pumping diverse xenobiotics (especially drugs) out of cells.
  • Major physiological sites and functions:
    • Intestine: Limits oral drug absorption (↓ bioavailability).
    • Blood-Brain Barrier (BBB): Restricts drug entry into the CNS.
    • Kidney (renal tubules): Promotes drug excretion into urine.
    • Liver (hepatocytes): Facilitates biliary drug excretion.
    • Placenta: Protects the fetus from harmful substances.
  • Overall effect: Reduces systemic drug exposure, protects vital organs. P-glycoprotein efflux pump mechanism

⭐ P-gp is encoded by the ABCB1 gene (formerly MDR1 gene) and plays a key role in multi-drug resistance in cancer cells.

P-gp Mechanism & PK Impact - The Gatekeeper's Action

  • P-glycoprotein (P-gp): ATP-dependent efflux pump (MDR1 gene product).
  • Mechanism: Actively transports drugs out of cells via ATP hydrolysis.
    • Reduces intracellular drug levels.
  • PK Impact & Locations:
    • Intestine: ↓ Drug absorption → ↓ oral bioavailability.
    • Blood-Brain Barrier (BBB): ↓ CNS drug penetration.
    • Kidney/Liver: ↑ Drug excretion.
    • Placenta: Limits fetal drug exposure.
    • Cancer cells: Contributes to multidrug resistance.

P-glycoprotein drug efflux mechanism

⭐ P-gp utilizes ATP hydrolysis to actively efflux a wide range of structurally diverse drugs, impacting their bioavailability and tissue distribution.

P-gp Drug Interactions - The Traffic Control

  • P-glycoprotein (P-gp, MDR1): Efflux pump (ATP-dependent) in intestines, BBB, kidney, liver.
  • Function: ↓ Drug absorption & CNS entry; ↑ drug elimination.
  • Modulation causes significant Drug-Drug Interactions (DDIs) & affects drug efficacy/toxicity.
CategoryKey ExamplesEffect on P-gp SubstrateClinical Outcome
SubstratesDigoxin, Dabigatran, Fexofenadine, Loperamide, Vincristine-Affected by modulators
InhibitorsVerapamil, Amiodarone, Ketoconazole, Clarithromycin, Ritonavir, Grapefruit Juice↑ Plasma concentration↑ Toxicity risk
InducersRifampicin, St. John's Wort, Carbamazepine, Phenytoin↓ Plasma concentration↓ Efficacy / Failure
📌 Common P-gp Inducers: Rifampicin, St. John's Wort, Carbamazepine, Phenytoin. (Remember: RSCP)

⭐ Co-administration of a P-gp inhibitor (e.g., verapamil) with a P-gp substrate (e.g., digoxin) can significantly increase the substrate's plasma concentration and risk of toxicity.

Clinical & Genetic Aspects - P-gp in Practice

  • Drug Resistance:
    • Cancer: P-gp overexpression → Multi-Drug Resistance (MDR) → ↓chemo efficacy (e.g., doxorubicin).
    • Infections: Resistance to HIV PIs, antifungals.
  • Altered Drug Efficacy & Toxicity:
    • Variable P-gp expression → altered oral drug bioavailability (digoxin, dabigatran) → ↑toxicity or ↓efficacy.
    • Affects CNS drug penetration (e.g., loperamide).
  • Genetic Factors:

    ⭐ Genetic polymorphisms in the ABCB1 gene (encodes P-gp) can lead to variable P-gp expression or activity, contributing to inter-individual differences in drug efficacy and toxicity for P-gp substrates.

    • SNPs in ABCB1 → altered P-gp function → variable response (e.g., tacrolimus, cyclosporine).
  • Therapeutic Implications:
    • Dose adjustments for P-gp substrates/inhibitors/inducers.
    • P-gp inhibitors (verapamil, quinidine) to overcome MDR or ↑drug absorption.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • P-glycoprotein (P-gp): an efflux pump (ABCB1/MDR1 gene); limits drug absorption & distribution.
  • Locations: intestine, liver, kidney, Blood-Brain Barrier (BBB), placenta; pumps drugs out of cells.
  • Key P-gp substrates: digoxin, dabigatran, cyclosporine, vinca alkaloids, loperamide.
  • P-gp Inducers (e.g., rifampicin, St. John's Wort): ↓ substrate levels → risk of therapeutic failure.
  • P-gp Inhibitors (e.g., verapamil, ketoconazole, ritonavir): ↑ substrate levels → risk of toxicity.
  • ABCB1 genetic polymorphisms alter P-gp function, affecting individual drug response and toxicity.
  • Crucial in Drug-Drug Interactions (DDIs), especially for narrow therapeutic index drugs like digoxin and tacrolimus.

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