The organic anion transporting polypeptide family member (OATP) 1B3 is a hepatic uptake transporter that has a broad substrate recognition and plays a significant role in regulating elimination of endogenous biomolecules or xenobiotics. OATP1B3 works in tandem with OATP1B1, with which it shares approximately 80% sequence homology and a high degree of substrate overlap. Despite some substrates being recognized solely by OATP1B3, its ability to compensate for loss of OATP1B1-mediated elimination and recognition by regulatory agencies, little is known about OATP1B3 regulatory factors and how they are involved with drug-drug interaction. It was recently discovered that OATP1B1 function is mediated by the activity of a particular tyrosine kinase that is sensitive to a variety of tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs). This study reports that OATP1B3 is similarly regulated, as at least 50% of its activity is reduced by 20 US Food and Drug Administration -approved TKIs. Nilotinib was assessed as the most potent OATP1B3 inhibitor among the investigated TKIs, which can occur at clinically relevant concentrations and acted predominantly through noncompetitive inhibition without impacting membrane expression. Finally, OATP1B3 function was determined to be sensitive to the knockdown of the Lck/Yes novel tyrosine kinase that is sensitive to nilotinib and has been previously implicated in mediating OATP1B1 activity. Collectively, our findings identify tyrosine kinase activity as a major regulator of OATP1B3 function which is sensitive to kinase inhibition. Given that OATP1B1 is similarly regulated, simultaneous disruption of these transporters can have drastic effects on systemic drug concentrations, which would promote adverse events. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT: The organic anion transporting polypeptide family member (OATP) 1B3 is a facilitator of hepatic drug elimination, although much is unknown of how OATP1B3 activity is mediated, or how such regulators contribute to drug-drug interactions. This study reports that OATP1B3 activity is dependent on the Lck/Yes novel tyrosine kinase, which is sensitive to numerous tyrosine kinase inhibitors. These findings provide insight into the occurrence of many clinical drug-drug interactions, and a rationale for future study of tyrosine kinases regulating drug disposition.
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