Abstract

Fluorouracil (5-FU), a chemotherapeutic agent widely used in the treatment of numerous common malignancies, causes oral mucositis in a proportion of patients. The contribution of drug transport processes to the development of this toxicity is currently unknown. This work aimed to establish and optimise a simple phenotyping assay for 5-FU uptake into primary buccal mucosal cells (BMC). The uptake kinetics of radiolabelled 5-FU were determined in pooled BMC freshly collected from healthy volunteers. The inter- and intra-individual variability in 5-FU uptake was then assessed across a cohort that included both healthy volunteers and cancer patients. 5-FU uptake into pooled primary BMC was both time and concentration dependent. An Eadie-Hofstee analysis suggested two components; a high-affinity (KM = 3.3µM) low-capacity ([Formula: see text] = 57.8pmolmin-1105 viable cells-1) transporter, and a high-capacity ([Formula: see text] = 1230pmolmin-1105 viable cells-1) low-affinity (KM = 3932µM) transporter. There was 180-fold variation in the rate of 5-FU uptake into BMC (0.10-17.86pmolmin-1105 viable cells-1) across the 34 subjects (healthy participants N = 24, cancer patients N = 10). Notably, retesting of a subset of these participants (N = 16) multiple times over a period of up to 140days demonstrated poor stability of the uptake phenotype within individuals. The uptake of 5-FU into healthy oral mucosal cells is a highly variable process facilitated by membrane transporters at pharmacologically relevant concentrations. This bioassay is simple, minimally invasive, and suitable for phenotypic analysis of drug transport in healthy primary cells.

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