Human P-glycoprotein transports cortisol, aldosterone, and dexamethasone, but not progesterone.

Kazumitsu Ueda(Kyoto University), Noboru Okamura(Kyoto University), Midori Hirai(Kyoto University of Education), Yusuke Tanigawara(Pharmac), Takashi Saeki(Kyoto University), Noriyuki Kioka(Kyoto University of Education), Tohru Komano(Kyoto University), Ryusuke Hori(Kyoto University of Education)
Journal of Biological Chemistry
December 1, 1992
Cited by 676Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

We expressed human MDR1 cDNA isolated from the human adrenal gland in porcine LLC-PK1 cells. A highly polarized epithelium formed by LLC-GA5-COL300 cells that expressed human P-glycoprotein specifically on the apical surface showed a multidrug-resistant phenotype and had 8.3-, 3.4-, and 6.5-fold higher net basal to apical transport of 3H-labeled cortisol, aldosterone, and dexamethasone, respectively, compared with host cells. But progesterone was not transported, although it inhibited azidopine photoaffinity labeling of human P-glycoprotein and increased the sensitivity of multidrug-resistant cells to vinblastine. An excess of progesterone inhibited the transepithelial transport of cortisol by P-glycoprotein. These results suggest that cortisol and aldosterone are physiological substrates for P-glycoprotein in the human adrenal cortex and that substances that efficiently bind to P-glycoprotein are not necessarily transported by P-glycoprotein.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis