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Merck

An in silico transwell device for the study of drug transport and drug-drug interactions.

Pharmaceutical research (2007-08-19)
Lana X Garmire, David G Garmire, C Anthony Hunt
RÉSUMÉ

Validate and exemplify a discrete, componentized, in silico, transwell device (ISTD) capable of mimicking the in vitro passive transport properties of compounds through cell monolayers. Verify its use for studying drug-drug interactions. We used the synthetic modeling method. Specialized software components represented spatial and functional features including cell components, semi-porous tight junctions, and metabolizing enzymes. Mobile components represented drugs. Experiments were conducted and analyzed as done in vitro. Verification experiments provided data analogous to those in the literature. ISTD parameters were tuned to simulate and match in vitro urea transport data; the objects representing tight junction (effective radius of 6.66 A) occupied 0.066% of the surface area. That ISTD was then tuned to simulate pH-dependent, in vitro alfentanil transport properties. The resulting ISTD predicted the passive transport properties of 14 additional compounds, individually and all together in one in silico experiment. The function of a two-site enzymatic component was cross-validated with a kinetic model and then experimentally validated against in vitro benzyloxyresorufin metabolism data. Those components were used to exemplify drug-drug interaction studies. The ISTD is an example of a new class of simulation models capable of realistically representing complex drug transport and drug-drug interaction phenomena.

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Sigma-Aldrich
Resorufin benzyl ether, CYP450 substrate