Malaria Journal (Jan 2020)

An in vitro toolbox to accelerate anti-malarial drug discovery and development

  • Susan A. Charman,
  • Alice Andreu,
  • Helena Barker,
  • Scott Blundell,
  • Anna Campbell,
  • Michael Campbell,
  • Gong Chen,
  • Francis C. K. Chiu,
  • Elly Crighton,
  • Kasiram Katneni,
  • Julia Morizzi,
  • Rahul Patil,
  • Thao Pham,
  • Eileen Ryan,
  • Jessica Saunders,
  • David M. Shackleford,
  • Karen L. White,
  • Lisa Almond,
  • Maurice Dickins,
  • Dennis A. Smith,
  • Joerg J. Moehrle,
  • Jeremy N. Burrows,
  • Nada Abla

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12936-019-3075-5
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 1
pp. 1 – 27

Abstract

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Abstract Background Modelling and simulation are being increasingly utilized to support the discovery and development of new anti-malarial drugs. These approaches require reliable in vitro data for physicochemical properties, permeability, binding, intrinsic clearance and cytochrome P450 inhibition. This work was conducted to generate an in vitro data toolbox using standardized methods for a set of 45 anti-malarial drugs and to assess changes in physicochemical properties in relation to changing target product and candidate profiles. Methods Ionization constants were determined by potentiometric titration and partition coefficients were measured using a shake-flask method. Solubility was assessed in biorelevant media and permeability coefficients and efflux ratios were determined using Caco-2 cell monolayers. Binding to plasma and media proteins was measured using either ultracentrifugation or rapid equilibrium dialysis. Metabolic stability and cytochrome P450 inhibition were assessed using human liver microsomes. Sample analysis was conducted by LC–MS/MS. Results Both solubility and fraction unbound decreased, and permeability and unbound intrinsic clearance increased, with increasing Log D7.4. In general, development compounds were somewhat more lipophilic than legacy drugs. For many compounds, permeability and protein binding were challenging to assess and both required the use of experimental conditions that minimized the impact of non-specific binding. Intrinsic clearance in human liver microsomes was varied across the data set and several compounds exhibited no measurable substrate loss under the conditions used. Inhibition of cytochrome P450 enzymes was minimal for most compounds. Conclusions This is the first data set to describe in vitro properties for 45 legacy and development anti-malarial drugs. The studies identified several practical methodological issues common to many of the more lipophilic compounds and highlighted areas which require more work to customize experimental conditions for compounds being designed to meet the new target product profiles. The dataset will be a valuable tool for malaria researchers aiming to develop PBPK models for the prediction of human PK properties and/or drug–drug interactions. Furthermore, generation of this comprehensive data set within a single laboratory allows direct comparison of properties across a large dataset and evaluation of changing property trends that have occurred over time with changing target product and candidate profiles.

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