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Role of multidrug resistance associated proteins in drug development
The Multidrug Resistance Associated Proteins (MRPI, MRP2, MRP3, MRp4, MRp5, MRP6, MRP7, MRPS and MRP9) belong to the ATP-binding cassette superfamily (ABCC family) of transporters expressed differentially in the liver, kidney, intestine and blood-brain barrier. MRps transport a structurally diverse array of endo- and xenobiotics and their metabolites (in particular conjugates) and are subject to induction and inhibition by a variety of compounds. An increased efflux of natural product anticancer drugs and other anticancer agents by MRPs in cancer cells is associated with tumor resistance. These transporting proteins play a role in the absorption, distribution and elimination of various compounds in the body. There are increased reports on the clinical impact of genetic mutations of genes encoding MRP1-9. Therefore, MRPs have an important role in drug development, since a better understanding of their function and regulating mechanism can help minimize and avoid drug toxicity, unfavorable drug-drug interactions, and to overcome drug resistance.
History
Title of book
Multidrug resistance : a global concernChapter number
1Pagination
3 - 35Publisher
Bentham Science PublishersPlace of publication
[San Francisco, Calif.]ISBN-13
9781608052929Language
engPublication classification
B1 Book chapterExtent
13Editor/Contributor(s)
A Khan, R ZarrilliUsage metrics
Categories
Keywords
ATP-binding cassette superfamilyxenobioticsmultidrug resistanceblood-brain barrierdrug toxicitygenetic mutationstumor resistancetranspofting proteinsdrug-drug interactionsScience & TechnologyLife Sciences & BiomedicinePublic, Environmental & Occupational HealthInfectious Diseasestransporting proteinsORGANIC ANION-TRANSPORTERBINDING CASSETTE TRANSPORTERSATP-DEPENDENT TRANSPORTLUNG-CANCER CELLSCONSTITUTIVE ANDROSTANE RECEPTORTENOFOVIR DISOPROXIL FUMARATECMRP\/CMOAT GENE-EXPRESSIONARYL-HYDROCARBON RECEPTORMRP4 CONFERS RESISTANCECONJUGATE EXPORT PUMP