Guiding Chemically Synthesized Peptide Drug Lead Optimization by Derisking Mast Cell Degranulation-Related Toxicities of a NaV1.7 Peptide Inhibitor

Author:

Morissette Pierre1,Li Nianyu1,Ballard Jeanine E2,Vavrek Marissa2,Adams Gregory L3,Regan Chris1,Regan Hillary1,Lee K J2,Wang Weixun2,Burton Aimee1,Chen Feifei1,Gerenser Pamela1,Li Yuxing1,Kraus Richard L1,Tellers David3,Palani Anand3,Zhu Yuping3,Sun Chengzao3,Bianchi Elisabetta4,Colarusso Stefania4ORCID,De Simone Daniele4,Frattarelli Tommaso4,Pasquini Nicolo’ Maria4,Amin Rupesh P1

Affiliation:

1. Nonclinical Drug Safety (NDS), Merck & Co., Inc, West Point, Pennsylvania 19486, USA

2. Pharmacokinetics, Pharmacodynamics and Drug Metabolism (PPDM), Merck & Co., Inc, West Point, Pennsylvania 19486, USA

3. Discovery Chemistry Peptide, Merck & Co., Inc, West Point, Pennsylvania 19486, USA

4. Peptides and Small Molecules R&D Department, IRBM Spa , Pomezia, Rome 00071, Italy

Abstract

Abstract Studies have shown that some peptides and small molecules can induce non IgE-mediated anaphylactoid reactions through mast cell activation. Upon activation, mast cells degranulate and release vasoactive and proinflammatory mediators, from cytoplasmic granules into the extracellular environment which can induce a cascade of severe adverse reactions. This study describes a lead optimization strategy to select NaV1.7 inhibitor peptides that minimize acute mast cell degranulation (MCD) toxicities. Various in vitro, in vivo, and PKPD models were used to screen candidates and guide peptide chemical modifications to mitigate this risk. Anesthetized rats dosed with peptides demonstrated treatment-related decreases in blood pressure and increases in plasma histamine concentrations which were reversible with a mast cell stabilizer, supporting the MCD mechanism. In vitro testing in rat mast cells with NaV1.7 peptides demonstrated a concentration-dependent increase in histamine. Pharmacodynamic modeling facilitated establishing an in vitro to in vivo correlation for histamine as a biomarker for blood pressure decline via the MCD mechanism. These models enabled assessment of structure-activity relationship (SAR) to identify substructures that contribute to peptide-mediated MCD. Peptides with hydrophobic and cationic characteristics were determined to have an elevated risk for MCD, which could be reduced or avoided by incorporating anionic residues into the protoxin II scaffold. Our analyses support that in vitro MCD assessment in combination with PKPD modeling can guide SAR to improve peptide lead optimization and ensure an acceptable early in vivo tolerability profile with reduced resources, cycle time, and animal use.

Funder

Merck & Co., Inc

IRBM Spa

Merck & Co., Inc. Merck & Co., Inc

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Toxicology

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