Cargando…

A Simple Method for Assessing Free Brain/Free Plasma Ratios Using an In Vitro Model of the Blood Brain Barrier

Historically, the focus has been to use in vitro BBB models to optimize rate of drug delivery to the CNS, whereas total in vivo brain/plasma ratios have been used for optimizing extent. However, these two parameters do not necessarily show good correlations with receptor occupancy data or other phar...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Culot, Maxime, Fabulas - da Costa, Anaëlle, Sevin, Emmanuel, Szorath, Erica, Martinsson, Stefan, Renftel, Mila, Hongmei, Yan, Cecchelli, Romeo, Lundquist, Stefan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3849192/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24312489
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0080634
_version_ 1782293890975399936
author Culot, Maxime
Fabulas - da Costa, Anaëlle
Sevin, Emmanuel
Szorath, Erica
Martinsson, Stefan
Renftel, Mila
Hongmei, Yan
Cecchelli, Romeo
Lundquist, Stefan
author_facet Culot, Maxime
Fabulas - da Costa, Anaëlle
Sevin, Emmanuel
Szorath, Erica
Martinsson, Stefan
Renftel, Mila
Hongmei, Yan
Cecchelli, Romeo
Lundquist, Stefan
author_sort Culot, Maxime
collection PubMed
description Historically, the focus has been to use in vitro BBB models to optimize rate of drug delivery to the CNS, whereas total in vivo brain/plasma ratios have been used for optimizing extent. However, these two parameters do not necessarily show good correlations with receptor occupancy data or other pharmacological readouts. In line with the free drug hypothesis, the use of unbound brain concentrations (Cu,br) has been shown to provide the best correlations with pharmacological data. However, typically the determination of this parameter requires microdialysis, a technique not ideally suited for screening in early drug development. Alternative, and less resource-demanding methodologies to determine Cu,br employ either equilibrium dialysis of brain homogenates or incubations of brain slices in buffer to determine fraction unbound brain (fu,br), which is subsequently multiplied by the total brain concentration to yield Cu,br. To determine Cu,br/Cu,pl ratios this way, still requires both in vitro and in vivo experiments that are quite time consuming. The main objective of this study was to explore the possibility to directly generate Cu,br/Cu,pl ratios in a single in vitro model of the BBB, using a co-culture of brain capillary endothelial and glial cells in an attempt to mimick the in vivo situation, thereby greatly simplifying existing experimental procedures. Comparison to microdialysis brain concentration profiles demonstrates the possibility to estimate brain exposure over time in the BBB model. A stronger correlation was found between in vitro Cu,br/Cu,pl ratios and in vivo Cu,br/Cu,pl obtained using fu,br from brain slice than with fu,br from brain homogenate for a set of 30 drugs. Overall, Cu,br/Cu,pl ratios were successfully predicted in vitro for 88% of the 92 studied compounds. This result supports the possibility to use this methodology for identifying compounds with a desirable in vivo response in the CNS early on in the drug discovery process.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-3849192
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2013
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-38491922013-12-05 A Simple Method for Assessing Free Brain/Free Plasma Ratios Using an In Vitro Model of the Blood Brain Barrier Culot, Maxime Fabulas - da Costa, Anaëlle Sevin, Emmanuel Szorath, Erica Martinsson, Stefan Renftel, Mila Hongmei, Yan Cecchelli, Romeo Lundquist, Stefan PLoS One Research Article Historically, the focus has been to use in vitro BBB models to optimize rate of drug delivery to the CNS, whereas total in vivo brain/plasma ratios have been used for optimizing extent. However, these two parameters do not necessarily show good correlations with receptor occupancy data or other pharmacological readouts. In line with the free drug hypothesis, the use of unbound brain concentrations (Cu,br) has been shown to provide the best correlations with pharmacological data. However, typically the determination of this parameter requires microdialysis, a technique not ideally suited for screening in early drug development. Alternative, and less resource-demanding methodologies to determine Cu,br employ either equilibrium dialysis of brain homogenates or incubations of brain slices in buffer to determine fraction unbound brain (fu,br), which is subsequently multiplied by the total brain concentration to yield Cu,br. To determine Cu,br/Cu,pl ratios this way, still requires both in vitro and in vivo experiments that are quite time consuming. The main objective of this study was to explore the possibility to directly generate Cu,br/Cu,pl ratios in a single in vitro model of the BBB, using a co-culture of brain capillary endothelial and glial cells in an attempt to mimick the in vivo situation, thereby greatly simplifying existing experimental procedures. Comparison to microdialysis brain concentration profiles demonstrates the possibility to estimate brain exposure over time in the BBB model. A stronger correlation was found between in vitro Cu,br/Cu,pl ratios and in vivo Cu,br/Cu,pl obtained using fu,br from brain slice than with fu,br from brain homogenate for a set of 30 drugs. Overall, Cu,br/Cu,pl ratios were successfully predicted in vitro for 88% of the 92 studied compounds. This result supports the possibility to use this methodology for identifying compounds with a desirable in vivo response in the CNS early on in the drug discovery process. Public Library of Science 2013-12-03 /pmc/articles/PMC3849192/ /pubmed/24312489 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0080634 Text en © 2013 Culot et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Culot, Maxime
Fabulas - da Costa, Anaëlle
Sevin, Emmanuel
Szorath, Erica
Martinsson, Stefan
Renftel, Mila
Hongmei, Yan
Cecchelli, Romeo
Lundquist, Stefan
A Simple Method for Assessing Free Brain/Free Plasma Ratios Using an In Vitro Model of the Blood Brain Barrier
title A Simple Method for Assessing Free Brain/Free Plasma Ratios Using an In Vitro Model of the Blood Brain Barrier
title_full A Simple Method for Assessing Free Brain/Free Plasma Ratios Using an In Vitro Model of the Blood Brain Barrier
title_fullStr A Simple Method for Assessing Free Brain/Free Plasma Ratios Using an In Vitro Model of the Blood Brain Barrier
title_full_unstemmed A Simple Method for Assessing Free Brain/Free Plasma Ratios Using an In Vitro Model of the Blood Brain Barrier
title_short A Simple Method for Assessing Free Brain/Free Plasma Ratios Using an In Vitro Model of the Blood Brain Barrier
title_sort simple method for assessing free brain/free plasma ratios using an in vitro model of the blood brain barrier
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3849192/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24312489
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0080634
work_keys_str_mv AT culotmaxime asimplemethodforassessingfreebrainfreeplasmaratiosusinganinvitromodelofthebloodbrainbarrier
AT fabulasdacostaanaelle asimplemethodforassessingfreebrainfreeplasmaratiosusinganinvitromodelofthebloodbrainbarrier
AT sevinemmanuel asimplemethodforassessingfreebrainfreeplasmaratiosusinganinvitromodelofthebloodbrainbarrier
AT szoratherica asimplemethodforassessingfreebrainfreeplasmaratiosusinganinvitromodelofthebloodbrainbarrier
AT martinssonstefan asimplemethodforassessingfreebrainfreeplasmaratiosusinganinvitromodelofthebloodbrainbarrier
AT renftelmila asimplemethodforassessingfreebrainfreeplasmaratiosusinganinvitromodelofthebloodbrainbarrier
AT hongmeiyan asimplemethodforassessingfreebrainfreeplasmaratiosusinganinvitromodelofthebloodbrainbarrier
AT cecchelliromeo asimplemethodforassessingfreebrainfreeplasmaratiosusinganinvitromodelofthebloodbrainbarrier
AT lundquiststefan asimplemethodforassessingfreebrainfreeplasmaratiosusinganinvitromodelofthebloodbrainbarrier
AT culotmaxime simplemethodforassessingfreebrainfreeplasmaratiosusinganinvitromodelofthebloodbrainbarrier
AT fabulasdacostaanaelle simplemethodforassessingfreebrainfreeplasmaratiosusinganinvitromodelofthebloodbrainbarrier
AT sevinemmanuel simplemethodforassessingfreebrainfreeplasmaratiosusinganinvitromodelofthebloodbrainbarrier
AT szoratherica simplemethodforassessingfreebrainfreeplasmaratiosusinganinvitromodelofthebloodbrainbarrier
AT martinssonstefan simplemethodforassessingfreebrainfreeplasmaratiosusinganinvitromodelofthebloodbrainbarrier
AT renftelmila simplemethodforassessingfreebrainfreeplasmaratiosusinganinvitromodelofthebloodbrainbarrier
AT hongmeiyan simplemethodforassessingfreebrainfreeplasmaratiosusinganinvitromodelofthebloodbrainbarrier
AT cecchelliromeo simplemethodforassessingfreebrainfreeplasmaratiosusinganinvitromodelofthebloodbrainbarrier
AT lundquiststefan simplemethodforassessingfreebrainfreeplasmaratiosusinganinvitromodelofthebloodbrainbarrier