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Hypoxia/reoxygenation stress modulates atorvastatin transport at the blood-brain barrier: A role for organic anion transporting polypeptide

Posted on:2015-02-20Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:The University of ArizonaCandidate:Thompson, BrandonFull Text:PDF
GTID:1474390017494400Subject:Physiology
Abstract/Summary:
Cerebral ischemia occurs when blood flow to the brain is insufficient to meet metabolic demand. This can result from cerebral artery occlusion that interrupts blood flow, limits CNS supply of oxygen and glucose, and causes an infarction/ischemic stroke. Ischemia initiates a cascade of molecular events in neurons and cerebrovascular endothelial cells including energy depletion, dissipation of ion gradients, calcium overload, excitotoxicity, oxidative stress, and accumulation of ions and fluid. Blood-brain barrier (BBB) disruption is associated with cerebral ischemia and leads to vasogenic edema, a primary cause of stroke-associated mortality. To date, only a single drug has received US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval for treatment of acute ischemia/reperfusion injury, recombinant tissue plasminogen activator (rt-PA). While rt-PA therapy restores perfusion to ischemic brain, considerable tissue damage occurs when cerebral blood flow is re-established. Therefore, there is a critical need for novel therapeutic approaches that can "rescue" salvageable brain tissue and/or protect BBB integrity during cerebral hypoxia and subsequent reoxygenation stress (H/R). One approach that may enable neural tissue rescue following H/R is CNS delivery of drugs with brain protective effects such as HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors (i.e., statins). Our present in vivo data demonstrates that atorvastatin, a commonly prescribed statin, attenuates poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) cleavage in the brain following H/R, suggesting neuroprotective efficacy. However, atorvastatin use as a CNS therapeutic is limited by poor blood-brain barrier (BBB) penetration. Therefore, we examined regulation and functional expression of the known statin transporter Oatp1a4 at the BBB under H/R conditions. In rat brain microvessels H/R (6% O2, 60 min followed by 21% O2, 10 min) increased Oatp1a4 expression. Brain uptake of taurocholate (i.e., Oap1a4 probe substrate) and atorvastatin were reduced by Oatp inhibitors (i.e., estrone-3-sulfate, fexofenadine), suggesting involvement of Oatp1a4 in brain drug delivery. Pharmacological inhibition of TGF-â/ALK5 signaling with the selective inhibitor SB431542 increased Oatp1a4 functional expression, suggesting a role for TGF-beta/ALK5 signaling in Oatp1a4 regulation. Taken together, our novel data show that targeting an endogenous BBB drug uptake transporter (i.e., Oatp1a4) may be a viable approach for optimizing CNS drug delivery for treatment of diseases with an H/R component.
Keywords/Search Tags:Brain, H/R, CNS, Oatp1a4, Atorvastatin, BBB, Drug, Stress
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