The SLC22 transporter family: a paradigm for the impact of drug transporters on metabolic pathways, signaling, and disease

SK Nigam - Annual review of pharmacology and toxicology, 2018 - annualreviews.org
Annual review of pharmacology and toxicology, 2018annualreviews.org
The SLC22 transporter family consists of more than two dozen members, which are
expressed in the kidney, the liver, and other tissues. Evolutionary analysis indicates that
SLC22 transporters fall into at least six subfamilies: OAT (organic anion transporter), OAT-
like, OAT-related, OCT (organic cation transporter), OCTN (organic cation/carnitine
transporter), and OCT/OCTN-related. Some—including OAT1 [SLC22A6 or NKT (novel
kidney transporter)] and OAT3 (SLC22A8), as well as OCT1 (SLC22A1) and OCT2 …
The SLC22 transporter family consists of more than two dozen members, which are expressed in the kidney, the liver, and other tissues. Evolutionary analysis indicates that SLC22 transporters fall into at least six subfamilies: OAT (organic anion transporter), OAT-like, OAT-related, OCT (organic cation transporter), OCTN (organic cation/carnitine transporter), and OCT/OCTN-related. Some—including OAT1 [SLC22A6 or NKT (novel kidney transporter)] and OAT3 (SLC22A8), as well as OCT1 (SLC22A1) and OCT2 (SLC22A2)—are widely studied drug transporters. Nevertheless, analyses of knockout mice and other data indicate that SLC22 transporters regulate key metabolic pathways and levels of signaling molecules (e.g., gut microbiome products, bile acids, tricarboxylic acid cycle intermediates, dietary flavonoids and other nutrients, prostaglandins, vitamins, short-chain fatty acids, urate, and ergothioneine), as well as uremic toxins associated with chronic kidney disease. Certain SLC22 transporters—such as URAT1 (SLC22A12) and OCTN2 (SLC22A5)—are mutated in inherited metabolic diseases. A new systems biology view of transporters is emerging. As proposed in the remote sensing and signaling hypothesis, SLC22 transporters, together with other SLC and ABC transporters, have key roles in interorgan and interorganism small-molecule communication and, together with the neuroendocrine, growth factor–cytokine, and other homeostatic systems, regulate local and whole-body homeostasis.
Annual Reviews