Mechanistic investigation of liver injury induced by BMS-932481, an experimental ɣ-secretase modulator

Author:

Zhuo Xiaoliang1,Howell Brett A2,Shen Hong3,Woodhead Jeffrey L2,Mosure Kathy1,Zhang Yueping3,Scialis Renato J4,Iyer Ramaswamy4,Sun Yongnian5,Boy Kenneth M6,Lentz Kimberley A1,Denton R Rex1,Soars Matthew G1,Johnson Benjamin M1,Humphreys W Griffith3

Affiliation:

1. Pharmaceutical Candidate Optimization, Bristol Myers Squibb , Wallingford, Connecticut, USA

2. Simulations Plus, Inc. , Research Triangle Park, North Carolina, USA

3. Pharmaceutical Candidate Optimization, Bristol Myers Squibb , Lawrenceville, New Jersey, USA

4. Nonclinical Disposition and Pharmacokinetics, Bristol Myers Squibb , Lawrenceville, New Jersey, USA

5. Automation and Assay Technologies, Bristol Myers Squibb , Lawrenceville, New Jersey, USA

6. Small Molecule Drug Discovery, Bristol Myers Squibb , Wallingford, Connecticut, USA

Abstract

Abstract BMS-932481 was designed to modulate ɣ-secretase activity to produce shorter and less amyloidogenic peptides, potentially averting liabilities associated with complete enzymatic inhibition. Although it demonstrated the intended pharmacology in the clinic, BMS-932481 unexpectedly caused drug-induced liver injury (DILI) in a multiple ascending dose study characterized by dose- and exposure-dependence, delayed onset manifestation, and a high incidence of hepatocellular damage. Retrospective studies investigating the disposition and probable mechanisms of toxicity of BMS-932481 are presented here. These included a mass balance study in bile-duct-cannulated rats and a metabolite profiling study in human hepatocytes, which together demonstrated oxidative metabolism followed by biliary elimination as the primary means of disposition. Additionally, minimal protein covalent binding in hepatocytes and lack of bioactivation products excluded reactive metabolite formation as a probable toxicological mechanism. However, BMS-932481 and 3 major oxidative metabolites were found to inhibit the bile salt export pump (BSEP) and multidrug resistance protein 4 (MRP4) in vitro. Considering human plasma concentrations, the IC50 values against these efflux transporters were clinically meaningful, particularly in the high dose cohort. Active uptake into human hepatocytes in vitro suggested the potential for hepatic levels of BMS-932481 to be elevated further above plasma concentrations, enhancing DILI risk. Conversely, measures of mitochondrial functional decline in hepatocytes treated with BMS-932481 were minimal or modest, suggesting limited contributions to DILI. Collectively, these findings suggested that repeat administration of BMS-932481 likely resulted in high hepatic concentrations of BMS-932481 and its metabolites, which disrupted bile acid transport via BSEP and MRP4, elevating serum biomarkers of liver injury.

Funder

Bristol Myers Squibb Co.

Simulations Plus, Inc.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Toxicology

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