info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Role of ABC transporters in veterinary medicine: Pharmaco-toxicological implications
Fecha
2019-01Registro en:
Virkel, Guillermo Leon; Ballent, Mariana; Lanusse, Carlos Edmundo; Lifschitz, Adrian Luis; Role of ABC transporters in veterinary medicine: Pharmaco-toxicological implications; Bentham Science Publishers; Current Medicinal Chemistry; 26; 7; 1-2019; 1251-1269
0929-8673
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Virkel, Guillermo Leon
Ballent, Mariana
Lanusse, Carlos Edmundo
Lifschitz, Adrian Luis
Resumen
Unlike physicians, veterinary practitioners must deal with a number of animal species with crucial differences in anatomy, physiology and metabolism. Accordingly, the pharmacokinetic behaviour, the clinical efficacy and the adverse or toxic effects of drugs may differ across domestic animals. Moreover, the use of drugs in food-producing species may impose a risk for humans due to the generation of chemical residues in edible products, a major concern for public health and consumer’s safety. As is clearly known in human beings, the ATP binding cassette (ABC) of transport proteins may influence the bioavailability and elimination of numerous drugs and other xenobiotics in domestic animals as well. A number of drugs, currently available in the veterinary market, are substrates of one or more transporters. Therefore, significant drug-drug interactions among ABC substrates may have unpredictable pharmacotoxicological consequences in different species of veterinary interest. In this context, different investigations revealed the major relevance of P-gp and other transport proteins, like breast cancer resistance protein (BCRP) and multidrug resistance-associated proteins (MRPs), in both companion and livestock animals. Undoubtedly, the discovery of the ABC transporters and the deep understanding of their physiological role in the different species introduced a new paradigm into the veterinary pharmacology. This review focuses on the expression and function of the major transport proteins expressed in species of veterinary interest, and their impact on drug disposition, efficacy and toxicity.