Symposium 7 Symposium on Transporters and Relevance to Exposure Levels Chairs: Professor Gabrielle Hawksworth, University of Aberdeen and Professor Frans Russel, (Radboud University Nijmegen, The Netherlands) The first speaker of the symposia was Professor Frans G.M. Russel (Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Centre, The Netherlands). Professor Russel started his talk by explaining the role and importance of transporters in toxicity studies. Both uptake and efflux transporters were discussed and their coordinated function with drug metabolising enzymes was explained as an important aspect of physiological systems. Professor Russel further explained the role of ABC transporter in determining xenobiotic accumulation and toxicity in various organs with special reference to the renal toxicity. The talk was concluded with the remarks that uptake and efflux transporters are important players in determining xenobiotic disposition, exposure and toxicity. Second speaker of the symposia was Dr Jashvant Unadkat (University of Washington, Seattle, USA) who talked about the role of transporters in drug efficacy, toxicity, and mitochondrial exposure. He started his talk by introducing transport systems in sub-cellular organelles and their role in drug efficacy and toxicity with special emphasis on mitochondria. He explained how the presence and absence of these membrane transporters in mitochondria can determine the level of exposure, efficacy, and toxicity of a specific drug. Nucleoside drugs, filauridine, gemcitabine, and ribavirin were discussed as specific examples by looking at their transport across the mitochondrial membrane and the mechanism of toxicity. Interspecies species difference was highlighted in the case of filauridine, a lethal mitochondrial toxin in humans but does not have any effect on rodents even on 1000 fold increased dose as ENT1 transporter on mitochondrial membrane, responsible for uptake of this drug, is not present in rodents. Dr Unadkat concluded his talk with the emphasis on important role of mitochondrial transport systems in drug toxicity and the need to include these studies in drug development to avoid the adverse effects at later stages. Third talk of the symposia was delivered by Dr Alfred H. Schinkel (Netherlands Cancer Institute, The Netherlands). Dr Schinkel’s area of interest is in vivo knockout models of transporters to study xenobiotic exposure. He started his talk by giving a brief background of their research and interest in these models which was studying the knock out effects of transporter proteins responsible for drug resistance in tumours. He showed the data that knocking out efflux transporters such as p-gp and Bcrp1 they observed a huge difference in oral availability of various drugs. They also studied the pharmacological and physiological functional overlap between drug resistance proteins. Dr Schinkel also explained the adverse effects in terms of higher levels of toxicity, especially hepatotoxicity and nephrotoxicity resulting from knocking down these transporters in vivo. Finally he discussed that how they are using this data for modelling biological system in order to predict drug, disposition efficacy, and toxicity in various organs. Final speaker of the symposia was Professor Amin Rostami-Hodjegan (University of Manchester and Simcyp Limited, Sheffield, UK) who discussed the exposure modelling and simulation with transporter data. Professor Rostami-Hodjegan explained the existing models of exposure, their inclusion criteria and limitations. He detailed exposure models used for toxicology and pharmacology with various good examples. Inclusion of transporters in these models was discussed in terms of criteria such as transport effects and how effective can be in the given model. The talk was concluded with the remarks that modelling is a dynamic, multilevel, and ever evolving phenomenon that needs continuous feeding in of new data to make it more productive. Symposium Report by Mohammad Farooq
LITHUANIAN UNIVERSITY OF AGRICULTURE Department of Crop Science and Animal Husbandry APPLIED BIOTECHNOLOGY Teaching method : lectures, supported by PowerPoint presentation and slides Prerequisites : basic knowledge of plant biology and physiology. Teaching aids : scripts referring to the actual topics are distributed during lectures. Examination method : oral examination, upon
A CASE OF PRIMARY INTRAPULMONARY MENINGIOMA Takashi Oide1, Michiyo Kambe2, Kenzo Hiroshima1, Sou Tamura3, Yasumitsu Moriya3, Hidehisa Hoshino3, Kiyoshi Shibuya3, Ichiro Yoshino3, Mari Mino-Kenudson4, Eugene J. Mark4, and Yukio Nakatani1, 2 1 Department of Diagnostic pathology, 3 Department of Thoracic Surgery, Graduate School of Medicine, Chiba University, 2 Department of Pathology, Chiba Univ