1 research outputs found
Investigating Nephrotoxicity of Polymyxin Derivatives by Mapping Renal Distribution Using Mass Spectrometry Imaging
Colistin
and polymyxin B are effective treatment options for Gram-negative
resistant bacteria but are used as last-line therapy due to their
dose-limiting nephrotoxicity. A critical factor in developing safer
polymyxin analogues is understanding accumulation of the drugs and
their metabolites, which is currently limited due to the lack of effective
techniques for analysis of these challenging molecules. Mass spectrometry
imaging (MSI) allows direct detection of targets (drugs, metabolites,
and endogenous compounds) from tissue sections. The presented study
exemplifies the utility of MSI by measuring the distribution of polymyxin
B1, colistin, and polymyxin B nonapeptide (PMBN) within dosed rat
kidney tissue sections. The label-free MSI analysis revealed that
the nephrotoxic compounds (polymyxin B1 and colistin) preferentially
accumulated in the renal cortical region. The less nephrotoxic analogue,
polymyxin B nonapeptide, was more uniformly distributed throughout
the kidney. In addition, metabolites of the dosed compounds were detected
by MSI. Kidney homogenates were analyzed using LC/MS/MS to determine
total drug exposure and for metabolite identification. To our knowledge,
this is the first time such techniques have been utilized to measure
the distribution of polymyxin drugs and their metabolites. By simultaneously
detecting the distribution of drug and drug metabolites, MSI offers
a powerful alternative to tissue homogenization analysis and label
or antibody-based imaging