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Characterizing solute transport across cell layers : Artifact correction and parameter extraction from a simplified three-compartment model

Tárnoki-Zách, Júlia ; Boldizsár, Imre ; Kovács, Gábor M. ; Döme, Balázs LU ; Bősze, Szilvia and Czirók, András (2025) In European Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences 215.
Abstract

Quantifying solute transport across epithelial cell layers grown on transwell inserts is a common approach in early-stage drug development to estimate pharmacokinetic properties such as absorption and bioavailability. To increase throughput and reduce variability, these assays are increasingly automated, including the use of robotic or microfluidic systems for time-resolved sampling. However, both automated and manual sampling can introduce systematic artifacts, such as residual volume retention and surface adsorption, that distort concentration time series and affect downstream analysis. To fully realize the potential precision of automated measurements, we propose a mathematical correction to account for sampling artifacts; then, to... (More)

Quantifying solute transport across epithelial cell layers grown on transwell inserts is a common approach in early-stage drug development to estimate pharmacokinetic properties such as absorption and bioavailability. To increase throughput and reduce variability, these assays are increasingly automated, including the use of robotic or microfluidic systems for time-resolved sampling. However, both automated and manual sampling can introduce systematic artifacts, such as residual volume retention and surface adsorption, that distort concentration time series and affect downstream analysis. To fully realize the potential precision of automated measurements, we propose a mathematical correction to account for sampling artifacts; then, to fit the corrected data to a three-compartment model that captures membrane diffusion, cellular sequestration, and metabolic loss. The method is demonstrated on datasets from transwell epithelial barrier transport assays. We suggest that the considered three-compartment model yields mechanistically more meaningful parameters than the conventional apparent permeability (Papp) measure. The proposed approach thus enables more accurate characterization of analyte interactions with the barrier cell layer, supporting better-informed assessments of compound behavior in vitro transport systems. Quantifying solute transport across epithelial cell layers grown on transwell inserts is a common approach in early-stage drug development to estimate pharmacokinetic properties such as absorption and bioavailability. To increase throughput and reduce variability, these assays are increasingly automated, including the use of robotic or microfluidic systems for time-resolved sampling. However, both automated and manual sampling can introduce systematic artifacts, such as residual volume retention and surface adsorption, that distort concentration time series and affect downstream analysis. To fully realize the potential precision of automated measurements, we propose a mathematical correction to account for sampling artifacts; then, to fit the corrected data to a three-compartment model that captures membrane diffusion, cellular sequestration, and metabolic loss. The method is demonstrated on datasets from transwell epithelial barrier transport assays. We suggest that the considered three-compartment model yields mechanistically more meaningful parameters than the conventional apparent permeability (Papp) measure. The proposed approach thus enables more accurate characterization of analyte interactions with the barrier cell layer, supporting better-informed assessments of compound behavior in vitro transport systems.

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author
; ; ; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Assay interpretation, Modeling, Permeability, Transport kinetics
in
European Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences
volume
215
article number
107323
publisher
Elsevier
external identifiers
  • pmid:41101515
  • scopus:105018706092
ISSN
0928-0987
DOI
10.1016/j.ejps.2025.107323
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
fcc9a4d2-6088-4511-b9a3-b7107f3132be
date added to LUP
2025-12-11 14:28:09
date last changed
2025-12-11 14:29:28
@article{fcc9a4d2-6088-4511-b9a3-b7107f3132be,
  abstract     = {{<p>Quantifying solute transport across epithelial cell layers grown on transwell inserts is a common approach in early-stage drug development to estimate pharmacokinetic properties such as absorption and bioavailability. To increase throughput and reduce variability, these assays are increasingly automated, including the use of robotic or microfluidic systems for time-resolved sampling. However, both automated and manual sampling can introduce systematic artifacts, such as residual volume retention and surface adsorption, that distort concentration time series and affect downstream analysis. To fully realize the potential precision of automated measurements, we propose a mathematical correction to account for sampling artifacts; then, to fit the corrected data to a three-compartment model that captures membrane diffusion, cellular sequestration, and metabolic loss. The method is demonstrated on datasets from transwell epithelial barrier transport assays. We suggest that the considered three-compartment model yields mechanistically more meaningful parameters than the conventional apparent permeability (Papp) measure. The proposed approach thus enables more accurate characterization of analyte interactions with the barrier cell layer, supporting better-informed assessments of compound behavior in vitro transport systems. Quantifying solute transport across epithelial cell layers grown on transwell inserts is a common approach in early-stage drug development to estimate pharmacokinetic properties such as absorption and bioavailability. To increase throughput and reduce variability, these assays are increasingly automated, including the use of robotic or microfluidic systems for time-resolved sampling. However, both automated and manual sampling can introduce systematic artifacts, such as residual volume retention and surface adsorption, that distort concentration time series and affect downstream analysis. To fully realize the potential precision of automated measurements, we propose a mathematical correction to account for sampling artifacts; then, to fit the corrected data to a three-compartment model that captures membrane diffusion, cellular sequestration, and metabolic loss. The method is demonstrated on datasets from transwell epithelial barrier transport assays. We suggest that the considered three-compartment model yields mechanistically more meaningful parameters than the conventional apparent permeability (Papp) measure. The proposed approach thus enables more accurate characterization of analyte interactions with the barrier cell layer, supporting better-informed assessments of compound behavior in vitro transport systems.</p>}},
  author       = {{Tárnoki-Zách, Júlia and Boldizsár, Imre and Kovács, Gábor M. and Döme, Balázs and Bősze, Szilvia and Czirók, András}},
  issn         = {{0928-0987}},
  keywords     = {{Assay interpretation; Modeling; Permeability; Transport kinetics}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  publisher    = {{Elsevier}},
  series       = {{European Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences}},
  title        = {{Characterizing solute transport across cell layers : Artifact correction and parameter extraction from a simplified three-compartment model}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ejps.2025.107323}},
  doi          = {{10.1016/j.ejps.2025.107323}},
  volume       = {{215}},
  year         = {{2025}},
}