Introduction: Transporters comprising the blood-brain barrier complicate delivery of many therapeutics to the central nervous system. The present study ascertained whether the natural product botryllamide G is viable for in vivo inhibition of ABCG2 using lapatinib as a probe for ABCB1 and ABCG2-mediated efflux from the brain. Methods: Wild-type and Mdr1a/Mdr1b (-/-) mice were treated with botryllamide G and lapatinib (“doublet therapy”), and while a separate cohort of wild-type mice was treated with botryllamide, tariquidar and lapatinib (“triplet therapy”). Results: Botryllamide G demonstrates biphasic elimination with a rapid distribution, decreasing below the in vitro IC50 of 6.9 µM within minutes, yet with a relatively slower terminal half-life (4.6 h). In Mdr1a/Mdr1b (-/-) mice, doublet therapy resulted in a significant increase in brain lapatinib AUC at 8 h (2058 h*ng/mL vs 4007 h*ng/mL; P =.031), but not plasma exposure (P =.15). No significant differences were observed after 24 h. Lapatinib brain exposure was greater through 1 h when wild-type mice were administered triplet therapy (298 h*pg/mg vs 120 h*pg/mg; P
CITATION STYLE
Strope, J. D., Peer, C. J., Sissung, T. M., Hall, O. M., Huang, P. A., Harris, E. M., … Figg, W. D. (2020). Botryllamide G is an ABCG2 inhibitor that improves lapatinib delivery in mouse brain. Cancer Biology and Therapy, 21(3), 223–230. https://doi.org/10.1080/15384047.2019.1683324
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.