Intracellular distribution of psychotropic drugs in the grey and white matter of the brain: the role of lysosomal trapping
Open Access
- 1 October 2001
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in British Journal of Pharmacology
- Vol. 134 (4) , 807-814
- https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.bjp.0704319
Abstract
Since the brain is not a homogenous organ (i.e. the phospholipid pattern and density of lysosomes may vary in its different regions), in the present study we examined the uptake of psychotropic drugs by vertically cut slices of whole brain, grey (cerebral cortex) and white (corpus callosum, internal capsule) matter of the brain and by neuronal and astroglial cell cultures. Moreover, we assessed the contribution of lysosomal trapping to total drug uptake (total uptake=lysosomal trapping+phospholipid binding) by tissue slices or cells conducting experiments in the presence and absence of ‘lysosomal inhibitors’, i.e., the lysosomotropic compound ammonium chloride (20 mM) or the Na+/H+‐ionophore monensin (10 μM), which elevated the internal pH of lysosomes. The initial concentration of psychotropic drug in the incubation medium was 5 μM. Both total uptake and lysosomal trapping of the antidepressants investigated (imipramine, amitriptyline, fluoxetine, sertraline) and neuroleptics (promazine, perazine, thioridazine) were higher in the grey matter and neurones than in the white matter and astrocytes, respectively. Lysosomal trapping of the psychotropics occurred mainly in neurones where thioridazine sertraline and perazine showed the highest degree of lysosomotropism. Distribution interactions between antidepressants and neuroleptics took place in neuronesviamutual inhibition of lysosomal trapping of drugs. A differential number of neuronal and glial cells in the brain may mask the lysosomal trapping and the distribution interactions of less potent lysosomotropic drugs in vertically cut brain slices. A reduction (viaa distribution interaction) in the concentration of psychotropics in lysosomes (depot), which leads to an increase in their level in membranes and tissue fluids, may intensify the pharmacological action of the combined drugs. British Journal of Pharmacology(2001)134, 807–814; doi:10.1038/sj.bjp.0704319Keywords
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