Prajakta Harish Patil, Mrunal Pradeep Desai, Vullendula Sai Krishna Anand, Rajdeep Ray, G. Gautham Shenoy, Swapnil Jayant Dengale, Krishnamurthy Bhat and P.C. Jagadish* Pages 1 - 18 ( 18 )
Introduction: P-glycoprotein, an ATP-dependent efflux transporter, plays a crucial role in eliminating cellular toxins and affects the intracellular concentration and bioavailability of CDK 4/6 inhibitors. Moreover, dietary flavonoids are natural bio-enhancers that can effectively inhibit the efflux function of these transporters. Therefore, this study aimed to assess the impact of dietary polyphenols on the inhibition of P-glycoprotein and the subsequent efflux of CDK inhibitors palbociclib and ribociclib.
Methods: A molecular docking approach was implemented to evaluate the binding interaction characteristics of CDK4/6 inhibitors in the presence of dietary polyphenols at the ATP binding site. Furthermore, the stability of the complexes was evaluated in two conformations of P-glycoprotein, followed by an ex vivo everted gut sac experiment.
Results: The findings demonstrated that the binding of curcumin and quercetin with high affinity (-51.63 and 47.16 Kcal/mol) to ATP binding sites of P-glycoprotein-palbociclib and ribociclib inward conformation complexes resulted in good stability of complex and minimal fluctuation throughout the course of the simulation. It was evident from the everted gut sac ex vivo study that the presence of 100µM of curcumin resulted in an increase of 1.77 and 4.20-fold in the intestinal transit of palbociclib and ribociclib, respectively.
Conclusion: The study emphasizes the significance of curcumin and quercetin as inhibitors of P-glycoprotein, demonstrating their potential to decrease the efflux of palbociclib and ribociclib, consequently contributing to their bioavailability enhancement.
Cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors, dietary polyphenols, p-glycoprotein inhibition, ATP, curcumin, quercetin, multidrug resistance.