An Agent-Based Approach to Dynamically Represent the Pharmacokinetic Properties of Baicalein
Authored by Tai Ning Lam, Xiao Zhu, Jianyuan Deng, Zhong Zuo
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1208/s12248-016-9955-5
Sponsors:
Research Grants Council of Hong Kong
Platforms:
Java
MASON
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Baicalein, a typical flavonoid presented in Scutellariae radix, exhibits
a unique metabolic profile during first-pass metabolism: parallel
glucuronidation and sulfation pathways, with possible substrate
inhibition in both pathways. In this project, we aimed to construct an
agent-based model to dynamically represent baicalein pharmacokinetics
and to verify the substrate inhibition hypothesis. The model consisted
of three 3D spaces and two membranes: apical space (S1), intracellular
space (S2), basolateral space (S3), apical membrane (M1), and
basolateral membrane (M2). In silico enzymes
(UDP-glucuronosyltransferases (UGTs) and sulfotransferases (SULTs)) and
binder components were placed in S2. The model was then executed to
simulate one-pass metabolism experiments of baicalein. With the
implementation of a two-site enzyme design, the simulated results
captured the preset qualitative and quantitative features of the wet-lab
observations. The feasible parameter set showed that substrate
inhibition happened in both conjugation pathways of baicalein. The
simulation results suggested that the sulfation pathway was dominant at
low concentrations and that SULT was more inclined to substrate
inhibition than UGT. Cross-model validation was satisfactory. Our
findings were consistent with a previously reported catenary model. We
conclude that the mechanisms represented by our model are plausible. Our
novel modeling approach could dynamically represent the metabolic
pathways of baicalein in a Caco-2 system.
Tags
Absorption
systems
Transport
Intestinal 1st-pass metabolism
Udp-glucuronosyltransferases
Substrate-inhibition
Drug-interactions
Disposition
Sulfotransferase
Monolayer