Sweeney William E, Frost Philip, Avner Ellis D
William E Sweeney, Ellis D Avner, Children's Research Institute, Children's Hospital Health System of Wisconsin and the Medical College of Wisconsin, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, WI 53226, United States.
World J Nephrol. 2017 Jul 6;6(4):188-200. doi: 10.5527/wjn.v6.i4.188.
To investigate the therapeutic potential of tesevatinib (TSV), a unique multi-kinase inhibitor currently in Phase II clinical trials for autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD), in well-defined rodent models of autosomal recessive polycystic kidney disease (ARPKD).
We administered TSV in daily doses of 7.5 and 15 mg/kg per day by I.P. to the well characterized bpk model of polycystic kidney disease starting at postnatal day (PN) 4 through PN21 to assess efficacy and toxicity in neonatal mice during postnatal development and still undergoing renal maturation. We administered TSV by oral gavage in the same doses to the orthologous PCK model (from PN30 to PN90) to assess efficacy and toxicity in animals where developmental processes are complete. The following parameters were assessed: Body weight, total kidney weight; kidney weight to body weight ratios; and morphometric determination of a cystic index and a measure of hepatic disease. Renal function was assessed by: Serum BUN; creatinine; and a 12 h urinary concentrating ability. Validation of reported targets including the level of angiogenesis and inhibition of angiogenesis (active VEGFR2/KDR) was assessed by Western analysis.
This study demonstrates that: (1) pharmacological inhibition of multiple kinase cascades with TSV reduced phosphorylation of key mediators of cystogenesis: EGFR, ErbB2, c-Src and KDR; and (2) this reduction of kinase activity resulted in significant reduction of renal and biliary disease in both bpk and PCK models of ARPKD. The amelioration of disease by TSV was not associated with any apparent toxicity.
The data supports the hypothesis that this multi-kinase inhibitor TSV may provide an effective clinical therapy for human ARPKD.
在明确的常染色体隐性多囊肾病(ARPKD)啮齿动物模型中,研究替塞伐替尼(TSV)的治疗潜力。TSV是一种独特的多激酶抑制剂,目前正处于针对常染色体显性多囊肾病(ADPKD)的II期临床试验阶段。
我们从出生后第4天(PN4)至PN21,通过腹腔注射,以每天7.5和15 mg/kg的日剂量,将TSV给予多囊肾病特征明确的bpk模型,以评估其在出生后发育阶段且肾脏仍在成熟过程中的新生小鼠体内的疗效和毒性。我们以相同剂量通过灌胃法将TSV给予直系同源的PCK模型(从PN30至PN90),以评估其在发育过程已完成的动物体内的疗效和毒性。评估了以下参数:体重、肾脏总重量;肾脏重量与体重之比;以及通过形态计量法测定的囊肿指数和肝病指标。通过以下指标评估肾功能:血清尿素氮;肌酐;以及12小时尿液浓缩能力。通过蛋白质免疫印迹分析评估包括血管生成水平和血管生成抑制(活性血管内皮生长因子受体2/KDR)在内的已报道靶点的验证情况。
本研究表明:(1)TSV对多个激酶级联反应的药理学抑制作用降低了囊肿形成关键介质的磷酸化水平:表皮生长因子受体(EGFR)、表皮生长因子受体2(ErbB2)、原癌基因酪氨酸蛋白激酶(c-Src)和血管内皮生长因子受体2(KDR);(2)激酶活性的这种降低导致ARPKD的bpk和PCK模型中肾脏和胆道疾病显著减轻。TSV对疾病的改善与任何明显毒性无关。
数据支持以下假设,即这种多激酶抑制剂TSV可能为人类ARPKD提供有效的临床治疗方法。