The systemic bioavailability of polynuclear aromatic
hydrocarbons (PAH) from ingested soils containing
manufactured gas plant (MGP) tar was evaluated in mice.
Soil and organic extract of each soil were incorporated
into a diet and fed to mice for two weeks. 1-Hydroxypyrene
levels in urine and chemical:DNA adduct levels in lungs
were used as biomarkers of PAH systemic bioavailability.
Estimates of PAH relative bioavailability were determined
by comparing the bioavailability observed between each soil
and corresponding organic extract. In all but one case,
bioavailability estimates based on 1-hydroxypyrene levels in
urine indicate that the presence of MGP tar on soil
results in a considerable decrease in PAH systemic
bioavailability (9−75%). Similarly, PAH bioavailability
estimates based on chemical:DNA adduct formation ranged
from nondetectable to 76%. These results clearly indicate
that the bioavailability of PAH is less than 100% when
soil contaminated with MGP tar is ingested by mice. In
addition, the experimental methods employed in this study
appear suitable for evaluating the effects of soil on the
gastrointestinal absorption and systemic bioavailability of
PAH from soil containing complex organic mixtures.
A thorough understanding of species-dependent differences in hepatic uptake transporters is critical for predicting human pharmacokinetics (PKs) from preclinical data. In this study, the activities of organic anion transporting polypeptide (OATP/Oatp), organic cation transporter 1 (OCT1/Oct1), and sodium-taurocholate cotransporting polypeptide (NTCP/Ntcp) in cultured rat, dog, monkey and human hepatocytes were compared. The activities of hepatic uptake transporters were evaluated with respect to culture duration, substrate and species-dependent differences in hepatocytes. Longer culture duration reduced hepatic uptake transporter activities across species except for Oatp and Ntcp in rats. Comparable apparent Michaelis-Menten constant (K) values in hepatocytes were observed across species for atorvastatin, estradiol-17β-glucuronide and metformin. The K values for rosuvastatin and taurocholate were significantly different across species. Rat hepatocytes exhibited the highest Oatp percentage of uptake transporter-mediated permeation clearance (PS) while no difference in %PS of probe substrates were observed across species. The in vitro hepatocyte inhibition data in rats, monkeys and humans provided reasonable predictions of in vivo drug-drug interaction (DDIs) between atorvastatin/rosuvastatin and rifampin. These findings suggested that using human hepatocytes with a short culture time is the most robust preclinical model for predicting DDIs for compounds exhibiting active hepatic uptake in humans.
7H-Benzo[c]fluorene (benzo[c]fluorene) is a major DNA adduct forming component of coal tar in lung of mice. The present study evaluated the types of PAH:DNA adducts formed from different neat coal tar samples and soils contaminated with coal tar. Mice were fed diets containing coal tar either neat or as a contaminant in an environmental soil sample for 14 days, and the types of chemical:DNA adducts formed in lung were evaluated using 32P-postlabeling and HPLC analysis. Three major DNA adducts derived respectively from benzo[b]fluoranthene (B[b]F), benzo[a]pyrene (B[a]P), and benzo[c]fluorene were detected in three of the four neat coal tar samples evaluated. In contrast, only a single major DNA adduct derived from benzo[c]fluorene was observed with the remaining tar sample. Ingestion of coal tar contaminated soil resulted in DNA adducts primarily derived from benzo[c]fluorene and B[b]F; a B[a]P derived DNA adduct was not detected. The DNA adducts derived from benzo[c]fluorene and B[b]F but not B[a]P were also observed with animals fed methylene chloride extracts of three of these soils but not the one designated A1000H soil. However, the extract of A1000H resulted in a B[a]P:DNA adduct being detected along with adducts formed from B[b]F and benzo[c]fluorene. The selective formation of the benzo[c]fluorene:DNA adduct with coal tar contaminated soils indicates that the in vivo systemic bioavailability and/or metabolism of benzo[c]fluorene is relatively high when compared to other DNA adducting hydrocarbons within coal tar. Benzo[c]fluorene may play a critical role in the potential of contaminated soil to induce a toxicological response in animals.
MMAE was not a CYP inducer in human hepatocytes. However, it caused a concentration-dependent CYP mRNA suppression and activity. The CYP suppression was associated with microtubule disruption, supporting the reports that intact microtubule architecture is required for CYP regulations. The absence of CYP suppression and microtubule disruption in vitro at the clinical plasma concentrations of MMAE (< 10 nM) explains the lack of pharmacokinetic drug interaction between brentuximab vedotin and midazolam, a sensitive CYP3A substrate, reported in patients.
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