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Hepatic efflux transporters include numerous well-known and emerging proteins localized to the canalicular or basolateral membrane of the hepatocyte that are responsible for the excretion of drugs into the bile or blood, respectively. Altered function of hepatic efflux transporters due to drug-drug interactions, genetic variation, and/or disease states may lead to changes in xenobiotic exposure in the hepatocyte and/or systemic circulation. This review focuses on transport proteins involved in the hepatocellular efflux of drugs and metabolites, discusses mechanisms of altered transporter function as well as the interplay between multiple transport pathways, and highlights the importance of considering intracellular unbound concentrations of transporter substrates and/or inhibitors. Methods to evaluate hepatic efflux transport and predict the effects of impaired transporter function on systemic and hepatocyte exposure are discussed, and the sandwich-cultured hepatocyte model to evaluate comprehensively the role of hepatic efflux in the hepatobiliary disposition of xenobiotics is characterized.
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Supplemental Video: Bile canalicular contractions in sandwich-cultured rat hepatocytes. Sandwich-cultured hepatocytes are dynamic, functional cells that exhibit motility throughout the cytoplasm when viewed by confocal microscopy. Note that the black line is located in the center of the open bile canalicular lumen, and movements in the pericanalicular region (arrow) occur prior to and during contractions resulting in closure of open canaliculi. This behavior is consistent with previously published reports that isolated hepatocytes (couplets/hepatocyte groups) in the early stages of monolayer formation exhibited intact tight junctions with regular, ordered contraction and slow refilling of bile canaliculi (see Reference A, below); canalicular contractions were forceful and expelled luminal contents into the medium (see References A–C, below). This supplemental video was produced by Daniel Bow, PhD, with the assistance of the Fluorescence Microscopy and Imaging Center at the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences. References A. Oshio C, Phillips MJ. 1981. Contractility of bile canaliculi: implications for liver function. Science 212:1041–42 B. Phillips MJ, Oshio C, Miyairi M, Katz H, Smith CR. 1982. A study of bile canalicular contractions in isolated hepatocytes. Hepatology 2:763–68 C. Boyer JL, Gautam A, Graf J. 1988. Mechanisms of bile secretion: insights from the isolated rat hepatocyte couplet. Semin. Liver Dis. 8:308–16 Download video file (AVI)