107 research outputs found

    Effect of 2\u27,3\u27-Didehydro-3\u27-Deoxythymidine in an In Vitro Hollow-Fiber Pharmacodynamic Model System Correlates with Results of Dose-Ranging Clinical Studies

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    We sought to validate an in vitro system which could predict the minimal effect dose of antiretroviral agents. Mixtures of uninfected CEM cells and CEM cells chronically infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) type 1 MN were exposed to 2\u27,3\u27-didehydro-3\u27-deoxythymidine (D4T) in vitro in a hollow-fiber model which simulates the plasma concentration-time profile of D4T in patients. Drug concentration was adjusted to simulate continuous intravenous infusion, or an intravenous bolus administered twice daily. The effect of the dosing regimen was measured with viral infectivity, p24 antigen, and reverse transcriptase or PCR for unintegrated HIV DNA. Dose deescalation studies on a twice-daily dosing schedule predicted a minimum effect dose of 0.5 mg/kg of body weight per day which correlated with the results of a clinical trial. Antiviral effect was demonstrated to be independent of schedule for every 12-h dosing versus continuous infusion. Finally, at or near the minimal effect dose, efficacy appeared to depend on the viral load. The ability of this in vitro pharmacodynamic model to assess the response of HIV-infected cells to different doses and schedules of antiviral agents may be useful in the design of optimal dosing regimens for clinical trials but requires validation with other types of antiretroviral agents

    2-Mercaptomethyl-thiazolidines use conserved aromatic-S interactions to achieve broad-range inhibition of metallo-β-lactamases

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    Infections caused by multidrug resistant (MDR) bacteria are a major public health threat. Carbapenems are among the most potent antimicrobial agents that are commercially available to treat MDR bacteria. Bacterial production of carbapenem-hydrolysing metallo-b-lactamases (MBLs) challenges their safety and efficacy, with subclass B1 MBLs hydrolysing almost all b-lactam antibiotics. MBL inhibitors would fulfil an urgent clinical need by prolonging the lifetime of these life-saving drugs. Here we report the synthesis and activity of a series of 2-mercaptomethyl-thiazolidines (MMTZs), designed to replicate MBL interactions with reaction intermediates or hydrolysis products. MMTZs are potent competitive inhibitors of B1 MBLs in vitro (e.g., Ki ¼ 0.44 mM vs. NDM-1). Crystal structures of MMTZ complexes reveal similar binding patterns to the most clinically important B1 MBLs (NDM-1, VIM-2 and IMP-1), contrasting with previously studied thiol-based MBL inhibitors, such as bisthiazolidines (BTZs) or captopril stereoisomers, which exhibit lower, more variable potencies and multiple binding modes. MMTZ binding involves thiol coordination to the Zn(II) site and extensive hydrophobic interactions, burying the inhibitor more deeply within the active site than D/L-captopril. Unexpectedly, MMTZ binding features a thioether–p interaction with a conserved active-site aromatic residue, consistent with their equipotent inhibition and similar binding to multiple MBLs. MMTZs penetrate multiple Enterobacterales, inhibit NDM-1 in situ, and restore carbapenem potency against clinical isolates expressing B1 MBLs. Based on their inhibitory profile and lack of eukaryotic cell toxicity, MMTZs represent a promising scaffold for MBL inhibitor development. These results also suggest sulphur–p interactions can be exploited for general ligand design in medicinal chemistry

    Mathematical Model of Plasmid-Mediated Resistance to Ceftiofur in Commensal Enteric Escherichia coli of Cattle

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    Antimicrobial use in food animals may contribute to antimicrobial resistance in bacteria of animals and humans. Commensal bacteria of animal intestine may serve as a reservoir of resistance-genes. To understand the dynamics of plasmid-mediated resistance to cephalosporin ceftiofur in enteric commensals of cattle, we developed a deterministic mathematical model of the dynamics of ceftiofur-sensitive and resistant commensal enteric Escherichia coli (E. coli) in the absence of and during parenteral therapy with ceftiofur. The most common treatment scenarios including those using a sustained-release drug formulation were simulated; the model outputs were in agreement with the available experimental data. The model indicated that a low but stable fraction of resistant enteric E. coli could persist in the absence of immediate ceftiofur pressure, being sustained by horizontal and vertical transfers of plasmids carrying resistance-genes, and ingestion of resistant E. coli. During parenteral therapy with ceftiofur, resistant enteric E. coli expanded in absolute number and relative frequency. This expansion was most influenced by parameters of antimicrobial action of ceftiofur against E. coli. After treatment (>5 weeks from start of therapy) the fraction of ceftiofur-resistant cells among enteric E. coli, similar to that in the absence of treatment, was most influenced by the parameters of ecology of enteric E. coli, such as the frequency of transfer of plasmids carrying resistance-genes, the rate of replacement of enteric E. coli by ingested E. coli, and the frequency of ceftiofur resistance in the latter

    Pharmacodynamic Modeling of Anti-Cancer Activity of Tetraiodothyroacetic Acid in a Perfused Cell Culture System

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    Unmodified or as a poly[lactide-co-glycolide] nanoparticle, tetraiodothyroacetic acid (tetrac) acts at the integrin αvβ3 receptor on human cancer cells to inhibit tumor cell proliferation and xenograft growth. To study in vitro the pharmacodynamics of tetrac formulations in the absence of and in conjunction with other chemotherapeutic agents, we developed a perfusion bellows cell culture system. Cells were grown on polymer flakes and exposed to various concentrations of tetrac, nano-tetrac, resveratrol, cetuximab, or a combination for up to 18 days. Cells were harvested and counted every one or two days. Both NONMEM VI and the exact Monte Carlo parametric expectation maximization algorithm in S-ADAPT were utilized for mathematical modeling. Unmodified tetrac inhibited the proliferation of cancer cells and did so with differing potency in different cell lines. The developed mechanism-based model included two effects of tetrac on different parts of the cell cycle which could be distinguished. For human breast cancer cells, modeling suggested a higher sensitivity (lower IC50) to the effect on success rate of replication than the effect on rate of growth, whereas the capacity (Imax) was larger for the effect on growth rate. Nanoparticulate tetrac (nano-tetrac), which does not enter into cells, had a higher potency and a larger anti-proliferative effect than unmodified tetrac. Fluorescence-activated cell sorting analysis of harvested cells revealed tetrac and nano-tetrac induced concentration-dependent apoptosis that was correlated with expression of pro-apoptotic proteins, such as p53, p21, PIG3 and BAD for nano-tetrac, while unmodified tetrac showed a different profile. Approximately additive anti-proliferative effects were found for the combinations of tetrac and resveratrol, tetrac and cetuximab (Erbitux), and nano-tetrac and cetuximab. Our in vitro perfusion cancer cell system together with mathematical modeling successfully described the anti-proliferative effects over time of tetrac and nano-tetrac and may be useful for dose-finding and studying the pharmacodynamics of other chemotherapeutic agents or their combinations

    Pharmacodynamics of Antiretroviral Chemotherapy

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    Pharmacodynamics of Caspofungin in a Murine Model of Systemic Candidiasis: Importance of Persistence of Caspofungin in Tissues to Understanding Drug Activity

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    Pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic studies were conducted in a murine model of systemic candidiasis to determine the pharmacodynamic parameter linked with caspofungin efficacy. Additional studies defined the importance of persistent tissue drug concentrations to treatment outcome. The pharmacokinetics of caspofungin were determined in the serum and kidneys of infected mice over 96 h. Population pharmacokinetic analysis demonstrated a serum terminal half-life (t(1/2)) for caspofungin of 20.2 h when only serum concentrations were considered, but the terminal t(1/2) increased to 59.2 h when serum and kidney concentration-time data were comodeled. In dose-range studies, the dose-response effect was well described by an inhibitory sigmoid curve for the exposure-effect killing caused by the drug (r(2) > 0.96; P ≪ 0.001). In dose-fractionation studies, fungal counts in kidneys were not statistically different for total doses given as one, two, or four equally divided doses over 96 h, indicating that the area under the concentration-time curve/MIC is the pharmacodynamic parameter that predicts caspofungin efficacy in our infection model. In a separate study, mice infected with Candida albicans 24 h after serum concentrations of caspofungin fell below the MIC for the fungal isolate had significant reductions in fungal densities in their kidneys compared with the growth of fungi in the kidneys of untreated controls (P = 0.005). This in vivo biological assay demonstrates that therapeutic concentrations of caspofungin persist at the site of infection in kidney tissue well after serum concentrations fall below the MIC, underscoring the primacy of caspofungin levels in tissues on determining treatment outcome
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