Abstract

6β-Hydroxycortisol (6β-OHF) is a substrate of the organic anion transporter 3 (OAT3) and the multidrug and toxin extrusion proteins MATE1 and MATE-2K in the corresponding cDNA-transfected cells. This study aimed to examine the contribution of OAT3 and MATEs to the urinary excretion of 6β-OHF in humans using the appropriate in vivo inhibitors, probenecid and pyrimethamine, for OAT3 and MATEs, respectively. Oat3(-/-) mice showed significantly reduced renal clearance of 6β-OHF (CL(renal, 6β-OHF)) compared with wild-type mice (18.1 ± 1.5 versus 7.60 ± 1.8 ml/min/kg). 6β-OHF uptake by human kidney slices was inhibited significantly by probenecid to 20-45% of the control values and partly by 1-methyl-4-phenylpyridinium. 6β-OHF plasma concentration and the amount of 6β-OHF excreted into the urine (X(6β-OHF)) were measured in healthy subjects enrolled in drug-drug interaction studies of benzylpenicillin alone or with probenecid (study 1), adefovir alone or with probenecid (study 2), and metformin alone or with pyrimethamine (study 3). Probenecid treatment caused a 57 and 76% increase in the area under the plasma concentration-time curve for 6β-OHF (AUC(6β-OHF)) in studies 1 and 2, respectively, but did not affect X(6β-OHF). Consequently, CL(renal, 6β-OHF) (milliliters per minute) decreased significantly from 231 ± 11 to 135 ± 9 and from 225 ± 26 to 141 ± 12 after probenecid administration in studies 1 and 2, respectively. By contrast, neither AUC(6β-OHF) nor CL(renal, 6β-OHF) was significantly altered by pyrimethamine administration. Taken together, these data suggest that OAT3 plays a significant role in the urinary excretion of 6β-OHF, and that 6β-OHF can be used to investigate the perpetrators of the pharmacokinetic drug interactions involving OAT3 in humans.

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