Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UNIPROT:P20020 (adenosine triphosphatase)
3,299 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Proton pump inhibitors irreversibly inhibit the enzyme hydrogen-potassium adenosine triphosphatase (H(+)-K(+)-ATPase), which suppresses acid production in the parietal cell of the stomach. Omeprazole, the prototype proton pump inhibitor, has proved to be very effective. However, newer agents are being designed to provide even more potent acid suppression and longer-acting proton pump inhibition, with the goal of further controlling gastric hypersecretion. Lansoprazole is the second proton pump inhibitor available on the market. Pantoprazole is not yet available for general use in the United States. However, each of these drugs is slightly different from omeprazole, thus offering some possible clinical advantages. Compared with omeprazole, lansoprazole has a longer duration of action and improved activity against Helicobacter pylori, while pantoprazole has less interaction with the cytochrome P-450 system and more predictable bioavailability. All three agents have similarly high healing rates for acid peptic diseases and appear to be superior to histamine2-receptor antagonists.
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PMID:Proton pump inhibitors: new drugs and indications. 854 54

The pharmacology, pharmacokinetics, clinical efficacy, adverse effects, and dosage and administration of pantoprazole are reviewed. Pantoprazole is a gastric hydrogen-potassium adenosine triphosphatase (H+/K(+)-ATPase) inhibitor. It shares the same core structure as other currently available proton-pump inhibitors (PPIs). The FDA-labeled indication is the short-term treatment of erosive esophagitis. PPIs act by selectively inhibiting H+/K(+)-ATPase in the secretory canaliculus of the stimulated parietal cell. Understanding the pharmacodynamics of PPIs is more relevant than knowing their pharmacokinetics, since the duration of action depends on the rate of de novo proton-pump regeneration, not the duration of drug circulation in the body. Pantoprazole is well absorbed, undergoes little first-pass metabolism, and has an absolute bioavailability of approximately 77%. Pantoprazole has been evaluated in more than 100 clinical trials involving more than 11,000 patients. It is effective in treating erosive esophagitis and duodenal and gastric ulcers. It is also effective as adjunctive treatment with antimicrobials in patients infected with Helicobacter pylori. Pantoprazole has been shown to control acid production in Zollinger-Ellison syndrome. Pantoprazole is well tolerated. The most commonly reported adverse effects are headache, diarrhea, and abdominal pain. The recommended oral dosage for erosive esophagitis is 40 mg once a day for up to eight weeks. The recommended i.v. dose is 40 mg given over 15 minutes once a day in patients with gastroesophageal reflux disease who are unable to take oral medication. Pantoprazole appears to be as safe and effective as other PPIs in acid-related disorders.
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PMID:Pantoprazole. 1140 94

The field of acid suppression has been advanced by therapeutics of increasing specificity for inhibiting gastric acid secretion. Particularly important are proton pump inhibitors (PPIs), which inhibit the activity of the gastric acid pump (H+,K(+)-adenosine triphosphatase), the final common step in gastric acid production. Histamine2-receptor antagonists, which act at an early stage of the acid secretion pathway, are less effective and are subject to intolerance. The PPIs are weak bases that undergo accumulation in the acidic space of the secreting parietal cell and are converted in acid to the active thiophilic form, which then forms disulfide bonds with key cysteines of the gastric acid pump. Pantoprazole differs from other PPIs in terms of its reaction with cysteine 822 in the pump and with cysteine 813, a common binding site for all PPIs. Both cysteines are in the sixth transmembrane segment, which is part of the ion transport pathway. This selective binding may have an impact on the dwell time of pantoprazole versus other PPIs because it is inaccessible to reducing agents, in contrast to cysteine 813. Pantoprazole is also very stable (has a slow rate of activation) at neutral pH values compared with other PPIs and has a relatively robust plasma concentration-time curve. These agents are important in the management of duodenal ulcers, nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drug-induced ulcers, gastroesophageal reflux disease, and dyspepsia, but basic pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic differences among them may affect clinical utility.
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PMID:Physiology of the parietal cell and therapeutic implications. 1458 60