Pharmacological P-gp identification Since P-gp mediated drug efflux is a major hurdle in CNS drug discovery, it is important to identify P-gp substrates.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
ENERGY, THERMODYNAMICS and ENZYMES
Advertisements

IMPACT OF EXPERIMENTAL CONDITIONS ON IN VITRO PERMEABILITY: (1) CORRELATIONS IN INTER-LABORATORY Caco-2 Y.H. Lee 1, K.J. Lee 1, N. Johnson 1, J. Castelo.
Introduction: The objective of this study was to provide solubility, rabbit intestinal permeability, Caco-2 permeability, and hepatocyte metabolism.
The Working Cell Figures 5.4 – 5.13
PHARMACOKINETIC.
Chemical pollutants of the food chain. Catherine Viguié CR INRA.
Peripheral inflammatory pain (λ-carrageenan injection) promotes localized paw edema and hyperalgesia Peripheral inflammatory pain reduces morphine efficacy.
Modern Tools for Drug Discovery NIMBUS Biotechnology Modern Tools for Drug Discovery
Improving Candidate Quality Through the Prediction of Clinical Outcome.
1 PK/PD modeling within regulatory submissions Is it used? Can it be used and if yes, where? Views from industry 24 September 2008.
Multidrug Resistance (MDR) is one of the major reasons for anti-cancer chemotherapy failure. The molecular mechanisms of MDR in cancer cells are involved.
A physiological model of induction of anaesthesia with propofol in sheep. Jinfei Yu 05/31/2006 R. N. Upton and G. L. Ludbrook.
Chapter 9 (part 3) Membranes. Membrane transport Membranes are selectively permeable barriers Hydrophobic uncharged small molecules can freely diffuse.
Pharmacokinetics Chapter 4.
Drug-Like Properties: Optimizing Pharmacokinetics and Safety During Drug Discovery Li Di and Edward H. Kerns ACS Short Course.
Background: Focus on P-gp Questions:
Drug discovery and development
February 23 rd 2009 CREATING BREAKTHROUGH DRUGS TO TREAT BRAIN DISEASES March 6, 2009Confidential ASENT Annual Meeting 2009 New Peptide Engineered Compounds.
2010 ASENT Conference March Highlights A novel mechanism of action and a new class of therapy in a large marketplace where existing mechanisms leave.
Pharmacokinetics (PK): What the body does to the drug? Most drugs: Enter the body by crossing barriers Distributed by the blood to the site of action Biotransform.
Enzymes Objectives: (a)
Virtual Drug Development in Southern California, A Pre-Clinical Focus in vitro tests to support IND submissions David Johnson, Ph.D. Director, DMPK MicroConstants,
Pharmacology Department
Prof. Hanan Hagar Pharmacology Department. What student should know  Major body fluid compartments  Concept of compartments.  Apparent volume of distribution.
Prof. Hanan Hagar Pharmacology Department.  Is the fraction of unchanged drug that enters systemic circulation after administration and becomes available.
Lecture 2.  Clearance Ability to eliminate the drug  Volume of distribution (Vd) The measure of the apparent space in the body available to contain.
Concepts and Applications of Pharmacokinetics
Predicting Blood-Brain Permeation from Three-Dimensional Molecular Structure Patrizia Crivori, Gabriele Cruciani, Pierre-Alain Carrupt, and Bernard Testa.
Samudrala group - overall research areas CASP6 prediction for T Å C α RMSD for all 70 residues CASP6 prediction for T Å C α RMSD for all.
I NNOVATORS 2010 Sorafenib Brain Distribution is Restricted by BCRP-Mediated Efflux at the BBB Sagar Agarwal University of Minnesota.
Macitentan – A novel sulfamide
LECTURE 4 FACILITATED DIFFUSION
TRANSPORT THROUGH CELL MEMBRANES Diffusion and Osmosis.
Lipophilicity & Permeability 김연수. Chapter 5. Lipophilicity.
Plasma Protein Binding
PHARMACOKINETICS Definition: quantitative study of drug absorption, distribution, metabolism, and excretion (ADME), and their mathematical relationship.
BIOPHARMACEUTICS.
Shirley M. Tsunoda Liver Transplant, Drug Metabolism/PK Research Interests Investigating the genetic and environmental factors that influence variability.
김소연 Permeability OverviewPermeability FundamentalsPermeability EffectPermeability Structure Modification StrategiesProblem.
Background. For designing, discovering or developing a therapeutically relevant molecule, potency and selectivity to the target.
Lecture 7 PHARMACOKINETICS
Discovery of Therapeutics to Improve Quality of Life Ram Samudrala University of Washington.
Moving Cellular Material Chapter 2, Lesson 3. Membranes Control the movement of materials in and out of cell. – Semipermeable – only certain substances.
Blood-Brain Barrier 강 경 태 Contents 1. BBB Fundamentals 2. Effects of Brain Penetration 3. Structure-BBB Penetration Relationships 4. Structure.
Dan Greitz Dept. of Neuroradiology Karolinska University Hospital Stockholm, Sweden New view on the CSF circulation: CSF production and CSF absorption.
Do We Need to Optimize Protein Binding in Drug Discovery? NEDMDG Summary Meeting Xingrong Liu, Ph.D. Genentech.
Advantages of Good Drug-like Properties 손한표.
Pharmacokienetic Principles (2): Distribution of Drugs
Lipinski’s rule of five
Telephone    Provider of Global Contract Research Services Accelerating Preclinical Research, Drug Discovery.
The Biopharmaceutical Classification System (BCS)
Chapter 8 BIOAVAILABILITY & BIOEQUIVALENCE
in the Rat Pup Ultrasonic Vocalization Model
Pharmacokinetics.
University of Leicester
Endocrine Pharmacology
Pharmacokinetics.
…driving discovery An improved potent direct thrombin inhibitor shows efficacy with low bleeding risk Anirban Datta et al.
Kinetics, Modeling Oct 19, 2009 Casarett and Doull,
Biopharmaceutics Dr Mohammad Issa Saleh.
Scientific rationale for EU regulatory expectations concerning product composition in case of Class-I and Class-III medicinal products Dr Ridha BELAIBA.
Kinetics, Modeling Oct 15, 2006 Casarett and Doull,
Virtual Screening.
Rules for Rapid Property Profiling from Structure
Writhing test Edited by dr. Magdy Awny 2018 INTRODUCTION.
Nat. Rev. Clin. Oncol. doi: /nrclinonc
Therapeutic Drug Monitoring chapter 1 part 1
Effects of inhibitors of drug efflux pumps on the penetration of antibiotics into the central nervous system. Effects of inhibitors of drug efflux pumps.
Pharmacokinetics/Pharmacodynamics
S. Aday, R. Cecchelli, D. Hallier-Vanuxeem, M.P. Dehouck, L. Ferreira 
Presentation transcript:

Pharmacological P-gp identification Since P-gp mediated drug efflux is a major hurdle in CNS drug discovery, it is important to identify P-gp substrates in the early screen phase. P-gp efflux mechanisms can be confirmed in the ex vivo Locust BBB model. This is exemplified in a study where locust brains were exposed to three doses of either the P-gp substrate quinidine or the passive permeating compound carbamazepine and in the same three doses in co-administration with the P-gp inhibitor verapamil. At the lower concentrations (3 and 30 uM) there was a significant increase in the uptake of quinidine in co-administration with verapamil, but at higher concentrations this was not the case (Figure 3). This suggests that the P-gp efflux transporter is saturated at higher concentrations resulting in an increased uptake. This was not the case for the passive permeating drug carbamazepine. Ex vivo BBB permeability model EntomoPharm has developed an invertebrate ex vivo system (Figure 1), based on a natural biological brain barrier from the locust grasshopper (Locusta migratoria), that can be used to screen and rank small-molecule compounds to identify drug leads with improved BBB properties [1] (Figure 2). The model can replace standard in vitro screen models with an additional opportunity for identification of P-glycoprotein (P-gp) substrates in the early screen cascade. All this whilst meeting the drug discovery demands for reliability, time and cost efficiency. In the ex vivo Locust BBB model compound permeability is studied at constant brain exposure of 1-10 µM and is independent of degrading enzymes and elimination. Data quality is high and the study outcome is always judged towards the response of an internal positive control. Key model advantages: 1. The locust blood brain barrier is a natural biological brain barrier that retains its biological integrity and control functions during the test procedure similar to vertebrate in vivo BBB models. 2. The ex vivo Locust BBB permeability model can be used for prediction of blood brain barrier permeability. Compounds can be ranked for BBB permeability in both single and multiple dosing regimens (Figure 2). 3. The Locust brain barrier contains a P-gp efflux mechanism that can be inhibited by verapamil and the ex vivo BBB locust permeability model is a valuable tool for the identification of P-gp substrates and inhibitors. The P-gp inhibitor, verapamil, can be included in the test protocol for identification of active P-gp mediated transport (Figure 3). 4. Only a small amount of compound material is needed for the ex vivo BBB permeability model and re-synthesis of compound is rarely necessary. EntomoPharm Figure 1: Brains from adult locusts (Locusta migratoria) are exposed to test compound at constant concentration for a period of 5 min in a 3x2brains set-up within a concentration span of µM. Figure 2: Locust BBB discriminates between vertebrate CNS (green shade) and non- CNS (blue shade) drugs after 5 min of constant compound exposure at 30 o C. Results are mean +/- s.e.m. Figure 3: The P-gp substrate Quinidine has a significantly higher permeability in the 10 and 30 uM doses in co-administration with the human Pgp inhibitor verapamil. This is not the case in the 100 uM dose where Pgp efflux is expected to be saturated. Results are mean concentration per g locust brain tissue +/- s.e.m. *P<0.05, **P<0.005, ***P< in a one- tailed equal variance students t-test (n=3). About EntomoPharm EntomoPharm was established in 2009 by multiyear experienced industrial professionals. The EntomoPharm vision is to become the global leader in cutting-edge insect models, delivering high-quality, high throughput and robust in vivo data in a timely and cost-efficient manner. EntomoPharms insect platform is designed to enable strong R&D decision making, thereby reducing the present-day 50-60% late stage ADMET failures. EntomoPharm continually develop and optimize their pre-clinical screen models in insects to provide customers with cost-efficient, quality rich data to fit the needs of pre-clinical compound optimization programs. 1. Nielsen PA, Andersson O, Hansen SH, Simonsen KB, Andersson G.: Models for predicting blood-brain barrier permeation. Drug Discovery Today, 2011 Jun, 16 (11-12), Sweden EntomoPharm BMC D10 Klinikgatan 32 S Lund Denmark EntomoPharm Fruebjergvej 3 DK-2100 Copenhagen Ø Contact VP Commercialization & Sales Lotte Martoft DVM, PhD Phone: Insects as a model species of blood brain barrier permeability The locust ex vivo BBB permeability model