Ioannou Y A, Zeidner K M, Gordon R E, Desnick R J
Department of Human Genetics, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, NY 10029, USA.
Am J Hum Genet. 2001 Jan;68(1):14-25. doi: 10.1086/316953. Epub 2000 Dec 13.
Preclinical studies of enzyme-replacement therapy for Fabry disease (deficient alpha-galactosidase A [alpha-Gal A] activity) were performed in alpha-Gal A-deficient mice. The pharmacokinetics and biodistributions were determined for four recombinant human alpha-Gal A glycoforms, which differed in sialic acid and mannose-6-phosphate content. The plasma half-lives of the glycoforms were approximately 2-5 min, with the more sialylated glycoforms circulating longer. After intravenous doses of 1 or 10 mg/kg body weight were administered, each glycoform was primarily recovered in the liver, with detectable activity in other tissues but not in the brain. Normal or greater activity levels were reconstituted in various tissues after repeated doses (10 mg/kg every other day for eight doses) of the highly sialylated AGA-1 glycoform; 4 d later, enzyme activity was retained in the liver and spleen at levels that were, respectively, 30% and 10% of that recovered 1 h postinjection. Importantly, the globotriaosylceramide (GL-3) substrate was depleted in various tissues and plasma in a dose-dependent manner. A single or repeated doses (every 48 h for eight doses) of AGA-1 at 0.3-10.0 mg/kg cleared hepatic GL-3, whereas higher doses were required for depletion of GL-3 in other tissues. After a single dose of 3 mg/kg, hepatic GL-3 was cleared for > or =4 wk, whereas cardiac and splenic GL-3 reaccumulated at 3 wk to approximately 30% and approximately 10% of pretreatment levels, respectively. Ultrastructural studies demonstrated reduced GL-3 storage posttreatment. These preclinical animal studies demonstrate the dose-dependent clearance of tissue and plasma GL-3 by administered alpha-Gal A, thereby providing the in vivo rationale-and the critical pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic data-for the design of enzyme-replacement trials in patients with Fabry disease.
在α-半乳糖苷酶A(α-Gal A)缺乏的小鼠中进行了法布里病(α-半乳糖苷酶A [α-Gal A]活性缺乏)酶替代疗法的临床前研究。测定了四种重组人α-Gal A糖型的药代动力学和生物分布,它们在唾液酸和甘露糖-6-磷酸含量上有所不同。这些糖型的血浆半衰期约为2 - 5分钟,唾液酸化程度更高的糖型循环时间更长。静脉注射1或10毫克/千克体重剂量后,每种糖型主要在肝脏中回收,在其他组织中可检测到活性,但在大脑中未检测到。重复给药(每隔一天10毫克/千克,共八剂)高度唾液酸化的AGA-1糖型后,各种组织中的活性水平恢复到正常或更高;4天后,肝脏和脾脏中的酶活性分别保留在注射后1小时回收水平的30%和10%。重要的是,各组织和血浆中的球三糖神经酰胺(GL-3)底物以剂量依赖性方式减少。0.3 - 10.0毫克/千克的AGA-1单次或重复给药(每48小时一次,共八剂)可清除肝脏中的GL-3,而其他组织中GL-3的清除则需要更高剂量。单次给药3毫克/千克后,肝脏中的GL-3清除超过或等于4周,而心脏和脾脏中的GL-3在3周时分别重新积累至预处理水平的约30%和约10%。超微结构研究表明治疗后GL-3储存减少。这些临床前动物研究证明了给药的α-Gal A对组织和血浆GL-3的剂量依赖性清除,从而为法布里病患者酶替代试验的设计提供了体内理论依据以及关键的药代动力学和药效学数据。