- Potential Risk of Food-Drug Interactions: Citrus Polymethoxyflavones and Flavanones as Inhibitors of the Organic Anion Transporting Polypeptides (OATP) 1B1, 1B3, and 2B1.
Potential Risk of Food-Drug Interactions: Citrus Polymethoxyflavones and Flavanones as Inhibitors of the Organic Anion Transporting Polypeptides (OATP) 1B1, 1B3, and 2B1.
Citrus flavonoids are not only components of daily nutrition, they are also promoted as dietary supplements and are important ingredients in traditional medicines. Interactions of flavonoids with synthetic drugs represent an often neglected issue. We therefore investigated in vitro whether the polymethoxyflavones nobiletin, sinensetin, and tangeretin and the flavonoid rutinosides didymin, hesperidin, and narirutin can inhibit human organic anion transporting polypeptides (OATP) 1B1, 1B3, and 2B1, which are important transporters mediating drug-drug and food-drug interactions. Inhibition was investigated by quantifying the decreased uptake of the fluorescent OATP1B1 and OATP1B3 substrate 8-fluorescein-cAMP in HEK293 cells overexpressing OATP1B1 or OATP1B3 and of the fluorescent OATP2B1 substrate 4',5'-dibromofluorescein in HEK293 cells overexpressing OATP2B1. We demonstrate that all flavonoids investigated inhibit OATP2B1 in the lower micromolar range (IC50 between 1.6 and 14.2 µM), but only the polymethoxyflavones also inhibit OATP1B1 and 1B3 (IC50 between 2.1 and 21 µM). All flavonoids investigated might contribute to the intestinal OATP2B1-based interactions with drugs observed with citrus juices or fruits. In contrast, the concentration of the polymethoxyflavones after consumption of citrus juices or fruits is most likely too low to reach relevant systemic concentrations and thus to inhibit hepatic OATP1B1 and OATP1B3, but there might be a risk when they are consumed as medicines or as dietary supplements.