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Intestinal Lymph Flow, and Lipid and Drug Transport Scale Allometrically From Pre-clinical Species to Humans

The intestinal lymphatic system transports fluid, immune cells, dietary lipids, and highly lipophilic drugs from the intestine to the systemic circulation. These transport functions are important to health and when dysregulated contribute to pathology. This has generated significant interest in appr...

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Autores principales: Trevaskis, Natalie L., Lee, Given, Escott, Alistair, Phang, Kian Liun, Hong, Jiwon, Cao, Enyuan, Katneni, Kasiram, Charman, Susan A., Han, Sifei, Charman, William N., Phillips, Anthony R. J., Windsor, John A., Porter, Christopher J. H.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7326060/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32670074
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2020.00458
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author Trevaskis, Natalie L.
Lee, Given
Escott, Alistair
Phang, Kian Liun
Hong, Jiwon
Cao, Enyuan
Katneni, Kasiram
Charman, Susan A.
Han, Sifei
Charman, William N.
Phillips, Anthony R. J.
Windsor, John A.
Porter, Christopher J. H.
author_facet Trevaskis, Natalie L.
Lee, Given
Escott, Alistair
Phang, Kian Liun
Hong, Jiwon
Cao, Enyuan
Katneni, Kasiram
Charman, Susan A.
Han, Sifei
Charman, William N.
Phillips, Anthony R. J.
Windsor, John A.
Porter, Christopher J. H.
author_sort Trevaskis, Natalie L.
collection PubMed
description The intestinal lymphatic system transports fluid, immune cells, dietary lipids, and highly lipophilic drugs from the intestine to the systemic circulation. These transport functions are important to health and when dysregulated contribute to pathology. This has generated significant interest in approaches to deliver drugs to the lymphatics. Most of the current understanding of intestinal lymph flow, and lymphatic lipid and drug transport rates, comes from in vitro studies and in vivo animal studies. In contrast, intestinal lymphatic transport studies in human subjects have been limited. Recently, three surgical patients had cannulation of the thoracic lymph duct for collection of lymph before and during a stepwise increase in enteral feed rate. We compared these data to studies where we previously enterally administered controlled quantities of lipid and the lipophilic drug halofantrine to mice, rats and dogs and collected lymph and blood (plasma). The collected lymph was analyzed to compare lymph flow rate, triglyceride (TG) and drug transport rates, and plasma was analyzed for drug concentrations, as a function of enteral lipid dose across species. Lymph flow rate, TG and drug transport increased with lipid administration in all species tested, and scaled allometrically according to the equation A = aM(E) where A is the lymph transport parameter, M is animal body mass, a is constant and E is the allometric exponent. For lymph flow rate and TG transport, the allometric exponents were 0.84–0.94 and 0.80–0.96, respectively. Accordingly, weight normalized lymph flow and TG mass transport were generally lower in larger compared to smaller species. In comparison, mass transport of drug via lymph increased in a greater than proportional manner with species body mass with an exponent of ∼1.3. The supra-proportional increase in lymphatic drug transport with species body mass appeared to be due to increased partitioning of drug into lymph rather than blood following absorption. Overall, this study proposes that intestinal lymphatic flow, and lymphatic lipid and drug transport in humans is most similar to species with higher body mass such as dogs and underestimated by studies in rodents. Notably, lymph flow and lipid transport in humans can be predicted from animal data via allometric scaling suggesting the potential for similar relationships with drug transport.
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spelling pubmed-73260602020-07-14 Intestinal Lymph Flow, and Lipid and Drug Transport Scale Allometrically From Pre-clinical Species to Humans Trevaskis, Natalie L. Lee, Given Escott, Alistair Phang, Kian Liun Hong, Jiwon Cao, Enyuan Katneni, Kasiram Charman, Susan A. Han, Sifei Charman, William N. Phillips, Anthony R. J. Windsor, John A. Porter, Christopher J. H. Front Physiol Physiology The intestinal lymphatic system transports fluid, immune cells, dietary lipids, and highly lipophilic drugs from the intestine to the systemic circulation. These transport functions are important to health and when dysregulated contribute to pathology. This has generated significant interest in approaches to deliver drugs to the lymphatics. Most of the current understanding of intestinal lymph flow, and lymphatic lipid and drug transport rates, comes from in vitro studies and in vivo animal studies. In contrast, intestinal lymphatic transport studies in human subjects have been limited. Recently, three surgical patients had cannulation of the thoracic lymph duct for collection of lymph before and during a stepwise increase in enteral feed rate. We compared these data to studies where we previously enterally administered controlled quantities of lipid and the lipophilic drug halofantrine to mice, rats and dogs and collected lymph and blood (plasma). The collected lymph was analyzed to compare lymph flow rate, triglyceride (TG) and drug transport rates, and plasma was analyzed for drug concentrations, as a function of enteral lipid dose across species. Lymph flow rate, TG and drug transport increased with lipid administration in all species tested, and scaled allometrically according to the equation A = aM(E) where A is the lymph transport parameter, M is animal body mass, a is constant and E is the allometric exponent. For lymph flow rate and TG transport, the allometric exponents were 0.84–0.94 and 0.80–0.96, respectively. Accordingly, weight normalized lymph flow and TG mass transport were generally lower in larger compared to smaller species. In comparison, mass transport of drug via lymph increased in a greater than proportional manner with species body mass with an exponent of ∼1.3. The supra-proportional increase in lymphatic drug transport with species body mass appeared to be due to increased partitioning of drug into lymph rather than blood following absorption. Overall, this study proposes that intestinal lymphatic flow, and lymphatic lipid and drug transport in humans is most similar to species with higher body mass such as dogs and underestimated by studies in rodents. Notably, lymph flow and lipid transport in humans can be predicted from animal data via allometric scaling suggesting the potential for similar relationships with drug transport. Frontiers Media S.A. 2020-05-21 /pmc/articles/PMC7326060/ /pubmed/32670074 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2020.00458 Text en Copyright © 2020 Trevaskis, Lee, Escott, Phang, Hong, Cao, Katneni, Charman, Han, Charman, Phillips, Windsor and Porter. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Physiology
Trevaskis, Natalie L.
Lee, Given
Escott, Alistair
Phang, Kian Liun
Hong, Jiwon
Cao, Enyuan
Katneni, Kasiram
Charman, Susan A.
Han, Sifei
Charman, William N.
Phillips, Anthony R. J.
Windsor, John A.
Porter, Christopher J. H.
Intestinal Lymph Flow, and Lipid and Drug Transport Scale Allometrically From Pre-clinical Species to Humans
title Intestinal Lymph Flow, and Lipid and Drug Transport Scale Allometrically From Pre-clinical Species to Humans
title_full Intestinal Lymph Flow, and Lipid and Drug Transport Scale Allometrically From Pre-clinical Species to Humans
title_fullStr Intestinal Lymph Flow, and Lipid and Drug Transport Scale Allometrically From Pre-clinical Species to Humans
title_full_unstemmed Intestinal Lymph Flow, and Lipid and Drug Transport Scale Allometrically From Pre-clinical Species to Humans
title_short Intestinal Lymph Flow, and Lipid and Drug Transport Scale Allometrically From Pre-clinical Species to Humans
title_sort intestinal lymph flow, and lipid and drug transport scale allometrically from pre-clinical species to humans
topic Physiology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7326060/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32670074
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2020.00458
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