Abstract

BackgroundAtenolol, a hydrophilic beta blocker, has been used as a model drug for studying passive permeability of biological membranes such as the blood–brain barrier (BBB) and the intestinal epithelium. However, the extent of S-atenolol (the active enantiomer) distribution in brain has never been evaluated, at equilibrium, to confirm that no transporters are involved in its transport at the BBB.MethodsTo assess whether S-atenolol, in fact, depicts the characteristics of a low passive permeable drug at the BBB, a microdialysis study was performed in rats to monitor the unbound concentrations of S-atenolol in brain extracellular fluid (ECF) and plasma during and after intravenous infusion. A pharmacokinetic model was developed, based on the microdialysis data, to estimate the permeability clearance of S-atenolol into and out of brain. In addition, the nonspecific binding of S-atenolol in brain homogenate was evaluated using equilibrium dialysis.ResultsThe steady-state ratio of unbound S-atenolol concentrations in brain ECF to that in plasma (i.e., Kp,uu,brain) was 3.5% ± 0.4%, a value much less than unity. The unbound volume of distribution in brain (Vu, brain) of S-atenolol was also calculated as 0.69 ± 0.10 mL/g brain, indicating that S-atenolol is evenly distributed within brain parenchyma. Lastly, equilibrium dialysis showed limited nonspecific binding of S-atenolol in brain homogenate with an unbound fraction (fu,brain) of 0.88 ± 0.07.ConclusionsIt is concluded, based on Kp,uu,brain being much smaller than unity, that S-atenolol is actively effluxed at the BBB, indicating the need to re-consider S-atenolol as a model drug for passive permeability studies of BBB transport or intestinal absorption.

Highlights

  • Atenolol, a hydrophilic beta blocker, has been used as a model drug for studying passive permeability of biological membranes such as the blood–brain barrier (BBB) and the intestinal epithelium

  • Atenolol has been considered as a typical representative of a hydrophilic small molecule with low passive permeability and low paracellular diffusion across intestinal membrane and blood–brain barrier (BBB)

  • The unbound S-atenolol level gradually increased during the infusion in plasma and brain extra‐ cellular fluid (ECF) to 4127 ± 103 ng/mL and 256 ± 41 ng/mL, respectively, at the last time point before the infusion ended

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Summary

Introduction

A hydrophilic beta blocker, has been used as a model drug for studying passive permeability of biological membranes such as the blood–brain barrier (BBB) and the intestinal epithelium. Atenolol has been considered as a typical representative of a hydrophilic small molecule with low passive permeability and low paracellular diffusion across intestinal membrane and blood–brain barrier (BBB). It has been used as a model drug in. The BBB is characterized by tight junctions formed between adjacent cerebral capillary endothelial cells These restrict paracellular transport, a pathway important for ions and other small hydrophilic molecules, which have lower permeability across the BBB and enterocytes. Tight junctions have a limited effect on the BBB and intestinal permeability for lipophilic molecules that mainly use the transcellular pathway [7].

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