Adriana Martinez Ledo, Gabriela Misiewicz, Thomas Dimke, William R. Tschantz, Jillian Handel, Ryan Pelis, Gerard Bruin, Karoline Bechtold-Peters, Manuel Sanchez-Felix, Sujal Deshmukh, Seunggyu Kim, Maria Proestaki and Roger D. Kamm
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引用次数: 0
摘要
淋巴血管系统在大分子(16 kDa)的皮下吸收中起关键作用。最近大分子治疗药物皮下递送的趋势使人们意识到,在首次进行人体研究之前,需要对皮下生物利用度进行临床前评估。体外工具提供了一种低成本的手段,为分子设计和配方提供信息,并减轻临床研究中治疗剂量和暴露的低估或高估所造成的代价高昂的错误。在先前的工程芯片淋巴平台的基础上,研究了基于淋巴吸收的体外模型对治疗蛋白进行排序的效用。在芯片上,在间质流动和生长因子补充的组合下生长的淋巴管表现出体内样形态、表型标记物表达和溶质排泄率。右旋糖酐分子量的增加在模型上进行了评估,结果表明粒径与扩散系数呈反比关系。更重要的是,九种治疗性蛋白和单克隆抗体的淋巴运输成功地对人类皮下生物利用度进行了排序(Pearson r = 0.8929)。本文描述的芯片淋巴模型弥补了制药行业在早期药物开发期间估计相对皮下生物利用度的空白,增加了成功选择候选药物的潜力,并更准确地估计剂量和暴露。
Utility of an in vitro lymphatics on-chip model for rank ordering subcutaneous absorption of monoclonal antibodies†
The lymphatic vasculature plays a key role in the subcutaneous absorption of macromolecules (>16 kDa). Recent trends toward subcutaneous delivery of macromolecular therapeutics have brought awareness to the need for preclinical estimation of subcutaneous bioavailability prior to first-in-human studies. In vitro tools offer a low-cost means to inform molecule design and formulation and mitigate costly mistakes of under- or overestimation of therapeutic dose and exposure in clinical studies. Building on a previous engineered on-chip lymphatics platform, the utility of an in vitro model to rank therapeutic proteins based on lymphatic absorption was investigated. Lymphatics grown under a combination of interstitial flow and growth factor supplementation on-chip demonstrated in vivo-like morphology, phenotypic marker expression, and solute drainage rates after a 4-day culture period. Dextrans of increasing molecular weight were assessed on the model and demonstrated an inverse relationship between size and diffusion coefficient. Similarly, a reduced lymphatic transport on-chip was observed for large antibody aggregates compared to non-aggregated molecules. More importantly, lymphatic transport of a panel of nine therapeutic proteins and monoclonal antibodies successfully rank ordered these molecules based on their subcutaneous bioavailability in humans (Pearson r = 0.8929). The on-chip lymphatics model described here appears as a promising tool for rank ordering subcutaneous lymphatic absorption during early drug development to increase the potential for successful candidate selection moving toward the clinic.
期刊介绍:
Lab on a Chip is the premiere journal that publishes cutting-edge research in the field of miniaturization. By their very nature, microfluidic/nanofluidic/miniaturized systems are at the intersection of disciplines, spanning fundamental research to high-end application, which is reflected by the broad readership of the journal. Lab on a Chip publishes two types of papers on original research: full-length research papers and communications. Papers should demonstrate innovations, which can come from technical advancements or applications addressing pressing needs in globally important areas. The journal also publishes Comments, Reviews, and Perspectives.