Mesh : Animals Aquaporin 1 / metabolism Coloring Agents Drug Delivery Systems / methods Drug Design Epithelium / metabolism Glutamic Acid / chemistry Humans Kidney / drug effects Kidney Cortex / diagnostic imaging metabolism Kidney Neoplasms / metabolism Kidney Tubules, Proximal / metabolism Low Density Lipoprotein Receptor-Related Protein-2 / metabolism Lysine / chemistry Magnetic Resonance Imaging Mice Peptides / administration & dosage chemistry pharmacokinetics Polycystic Kidney Diseases / diagnostic imaging drug therapy Tissue Distribution

来  源:   DOI:10.1124/jpet.119.257022   PDF(Sci-hub)

Abstract:
Autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD) is a leading monogenetic cause of end-stage renal disease with limited therapeutic repertoire. A targeted drug delivery strategy that directs a small molecule to renal niches around cysts could increase the safety margins of agents that slow the progression of ADPKD but are poorly tolerated due to extrarenal toxicity. Herein, we determined whether previously characterized lysine-based and glutamic acid-based megalin-binding peptides can achieve renal-specific localization in the juvenile cystic kidney (JCK) mouse model of polycystic kidney disease and whether the distribution is altered compared with control mice. We performed in vivo optical and magnetic resonance imaging studies using peptides conjugated to the VivoTag 680 dye and demonstrated that megalin-interacting peptides distributed almost exclusively to the kidney cortex in both normal and JCK mice. Confocal analysis demonstrated that the peptide-dye conjugate distribution overlapped with megalin-positive renal proximal tubules. However, in the JCK mouse, the epithelium of renal cysts did not retain expression of the proximal tubule markers aquaporin 1 and megalin, and therefore these cysts did not retain peptide-dye conjugates. Furthermore, human kidney tumor tissues were evaluated by immunohistochemistry and revealed significant megalin expression in tissues from patients with renal cell carcinoma, raising the possibility that these tumors could be treated using this drug delivery strategy. Taken together, our data suggest that linking a small-molecule drug to these carrier peptides could represent a promising opportunity to develop a new platform for renal enrichment and targeting in the treatment of ADPKD and certain renal carcinomas.
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