This article is available online at http://dmd.aspetjournals.org
ABSTRACT:The pharmacokinetics of a 2-O-(2-methoxyethyl)-ribose modified phosphorothioate oligonucleotide, ISIS 104838 (human tumor necrosis factor-␣ antisense), have been characterized in mouse, rat, dog, monkey, and human. Plasma pharmacokinetics after i.v. administration exhibited relatively rapid distribution from plasma to tissues with a distribution half-life estimated from approximately 15 to 45 min in all species. Absorption after s.c. injection was high (80-100%), and absorption after intrajejunal administration in proprietary formulations was as high as 10% bioavailability compared with i.v. administration. Urinary excretion of the parent drug was low, with less than 1% of the administered dose excreted in urine after i.v. infusion in monkeys at clinically relevant doses (<5 mg/ kg). ISIS 104838 is highly bound to plasma proteins, likely preventing renal filtration. However, shortened oligonucleotide metabolites of ISIS 104838 lose their affinity to bind plasma proteins. Thus, excretion of radiolabel (mostly as metabolites) in urine (75%) and feces (5-10%) was nearly complete by 90 days. Elimination of ISIS 104838 from tissue was slow (multiple days) for all species, depending on the tissue or organ. The highest concentrations of ISIS 104838 in tissues were seen in kidney, liver, lymph nodes, bone marrow, and spleen. In general, concentrations of ISIS 104838 were higher in monkey tissues than in rodents at body weight-equivalent doses. Plasma pharmacokinetics scale well across species as a function of body weight alone. This favorable pharmacokinetic profile for ISIS 104838 provides guidance for clinical development and appears to support infrequent and convenient dose administration.
The objective of this study was to investigate the use of folate-targeted liposomes for the delivery of encapsulated oligonucleotides to folate receptor (FR)-positive tumor cells in vitro and in vivo. This project involved the synthesis and biological evaluation of many folate-PEG-lipid conjugates, where the chemical form of the folate moiety (pteroate) and the length of the PEG linker chain were varied widely. Folate-targeted oligonucleotide-containing liposomes were prepared using conventional methods, and the extent of cell uptake was evaluated using, among others, the FR positive KB cell line. Oligonucleotide-loaded folate-targeted liposomes were found to rapidly associate with the KB cells, and saturation was typically reached within the first hour of incubation at 37 degrees C. Nearly 100,000 liposomes per cell were bound or internalized at saturation. Importantly, cell association was blocked by a large excess folic acid, thus reflecting the FR-specific nature of the cell interaction. Full targeting potential was achieved with PEG linkers as low as 1000 in molecular weight, and pteroates bearing glycine or gamma-aminobutyryl residues juxtaposed to the pteroic acid moiety were also effective for targeting, provided that a terminal cysteine moiety was present at the distal end of the PEG chain for added hydrophilicity. When tested in vivo, folate-targeted liposomes were found to deliver approximately 1.8-fold more oligonucleotide to the livers of nude mice (relative to the nontargeted PEG-containing formulations); however, no improvement in KB tumor uptake was observed. We conclude from these results that folate liposomes can effectively deliver oligonucleotides into folate receptor-bearing cells in vitro, but additional barriers exist in vivo that prevent or decrease effective tumor uptake and retention.
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