Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences 1985-08-01

Altered drug-serum protein binding in the genetically obese Zucker rat.

I H Benedek, R A Blouin, P J McNamara

Index: J. Pharm. Sci. 74(8) , 837-40, (1985)

Full Text: HTML

Abstract

Drug-serum protein binding was evaluated in genetically obese Zucker rats, their lean littermates, and lean Sprague-Dawley rats. The free fraction (fp) of phenytoin was significantly higher in the obese rat (fp = 0.177) compared to its lean littermate (fp = 0.136), apparently due to displacement by free fatty acids. Conversely, diazepam and propranolol fp values were decreased in the obese Zucker rat (fp = 0.107 and fp = 0.122, respectively) compared to the lean Zucker rat (fp = 0.140 and fp = 0.174, respectively). Evidence strongly suggests that the increased binding of propranolol was not due to elevations in the serum concentrations of alpha1-acid glycoprotein (as is the case in the human obese population). Rather, the decreased fp for both diazepam and propranolol was a result of increased lipoprotein partitioning. Strain differences between the lean Zucker rat and lean Sprague-Dawley rat were also evident, with serum binding of the Sprague-Dawley rat more closely resembling the obese Zucker rat.


Related Compounds

Related Articles:

Elucidating toxicological mechanisms of current flame retardants using a bacterial gene profiling assay.

2015-12-01

[Toxicol. In Vitro 29 , 2124-32, (2015)]

Organophosphate flame retardants and organosiloxanes in predatory freshwater fish from locations across Canada.

2014-10-01

[Environ. Pollut. 193 , 254-61, (2014)]

Levels and distributions of organophosphate flame retardants and plasticizers in sediment from Taihu Lake, China.

2012-07-01

[Environ. Toxicol. Chem. 31(7) , 1478-84, (2012)]

Estimation of tris(2-butoxyethyl) phosphate in biological fluids: novel intersubject variability in recovery from human serum.

1984-12-01

[J. Pharm. Sci. 73(12) , 1791-3, (1984)]

In vitro endocrine disruption potential of organophosphate flame retardants via human nuclear receptors.

2013-12-06

[Toxicology 314(1) , 76-83, (2013)]

More Articles...