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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Exploitation of Bile Acid Transport Systems in Prodrug Design

Elina Sievänen
- 16 Aug 2007 - 
- Vol. 12, Iss: 8, pp 1859-1889
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TLDR
Bile Acid transport proteins involved in enterohepatic circulation are described, the key factors affecting on the transport by these proteins are summarized, and the use of bile acids and their derivatives in designing prodrugs capable of exploiting the bile acid transport system is reviewed.
Abstract
The enterohepatic circulation of bile acids is one of the most efficient recycling routes in the human body. It is a complex process involving numerous transport proteins, which serve to transport bile acids from the small intestine into portal circulation, from the portal circulation into the hepatocyte, from the hepatocyte into the bile, and from the gall bladder to the small intestine. The tremendous transport capacity and organ specificity of enterohepatic circulation combined with versatile derivatization possibilities, rigid steroidal backbone, enantiomeric purity, availability, and low cost have made bile acids attractive tools in designing pharmacological hybrid molecules and prodrugs with the view of improving intestinal absorption, increasing the metabolic stability of pharmaceuticals, specifically targeting drugs to organs involved in enterohepatic circulation, as well as sustaining therapeutically reasonable systemic concentrations of active agents. This article briefly describes bile acid transport proteins involved in enterohepatic circulation, summarizes the key factors affecting on the transport by these proteins, and reviews the use of bile acids and their derivatives in designing prodrugs capable of exploiting the bile acid transport system.

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Role of the intestinal bile acid transporters in bile acid and drug disposition.

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Quinoline-based antimalarial hybrid compounds.

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References
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Book

Principles of Biochemistry

TL;DR: The third edition, coming ten years after the first, emphasizes both the flowering of biochemical research and the prodigious effort by busy teachers and scientists to keep up to date this popular text and reference.
Book

Comprehensive Supramolecular Chemistry

TL;DR: The aim of this book is to provide a history of Supramolecular Chemistry from its inception in the 1920s to the present day, with a focus on the period between 1950 and 1983.
Journal ArticleDOI

Identification of a Nuclear Receptor for Bile Acids

TL;DR: Results presented here show that bile acids are physiological ligands for the farnesoid X receptor (FXR), an orphan nuclear receptor, which demonstrates a mechanism by which bile acid transcriptionally regulate their biosynthesis and enterohepatic transport.
Journal ArticleDOI

Bile Acids: Natural Ligands for an Orphan Nuclear Receptor

TL;DR: Results provide evidence for a nuclear bile acid signaling pathway that may regulate cholesterol homeostasis and modulated interaction of FXR with a peptide derived from steroid receptor coactivator 1.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Liver: Biology and Pathobiology

William D. Carey, +1 more
- 18 Feb 1983 - 
TL;DR: This book is not, however, another catechism of clinical liver disease, but an effort to encapsulate knowledge in the expanding field of hepatobiology, and produces a definitive text on the biology and pathobiology of the liver.
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