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The current study is part of a large multi-investigator grant to look at the pharmacogenetics of a number of membrane transporters. The investigators will study individuals with particular genotypes of the human organic cation transporter, (hOCT2), and the multidrug and toxin extrusion transporters, MATE1, MATE2-K to test the hypothesis that genetic variation in hOCT2, hMATEE1 and hMATE2-K are associated with variation in the pharmacokinetics and/or pharmacodynamics of the antidiabetic agent, metformin.
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In the proposed study, a genotype to phenotype strategy is employed to study the role of the transporters, OCT2, MATE1, and MATE2-K and related variants in response and disposition to a known substrate, metformin. Recently, one polymorphic variant in MATE1 (PMT4302, g.-66T>C) showed decreased promoter activity by 40-45% (p<0.01), and one MATE2-K variant (PMT5597, g.-130G>A) showed increased promoter activity by 30% (p<0.05), compared to the reference. Both are the most common promoter variants in each gene (the frequencies of PMT4302: 32.1% and 23.1% in Caucasian and Asian; PMT5597: 26.2% and 48.5% in Caucasian and Asian) (unpublished data, Giacomini group). Specifically, the investigators will measure renal clearance of metformin, and plasma glucose and insulin levels, in healthy Caucasian and Asian subjects who carry either the reference or variant alleles in order to evaluate the effects of these variants on metformin disposition and response.
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41 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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