Affiliation:
1. Leslie Dan Faculty of Pharmacy, Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of Toronto , Toronto, Ontario M5S 3M2, Canada
2. Department of Pathobiology, University of Guelph , Guelph, Ontario N1G 2W1, Canada
Abstract
Abstract
Idiosyncratic drug reactions (IDRs) are associated with significant patient morbidity/mortality and lead to considerable drug candidate attrition in drug development. Their idiosyncratic nature makes the study of IDRs difficult. In particular, nevirapine is associated with a relatively high risk of serious skin rash and liver injury. We previously found that nevirapine causes a similar skin rash in female Brown Norway rats, but these animals do not develop significant liver injury. Programmed cell death protein-1 (PD-1) is an immune checkpoint involved in immune tolerance, and anti-PD-1 antibodies have been used to treat cancer. However, they increase the risk of liver injury caused by co-administered drugs. We found that PD-1−/− mice are more susceptible to drug-induced liver injury, but PD-1−/− mice are not a good model for all drugs. In particular, they do not develop a skin rash when treated with nevirapine, at least in part because they lack the sulfotransferase in their skin that forms the reactive metabolite responsible for the rash. Therefore, we developed a PD-1 mutant (PD-1m/m) rat, with an excision in the ligand-binding domain of PD-1, to test whether nevirapine would cause a more serious skin rash in these animals. The PD-1m/m rat was based on a Sprague Dawley background, which has a lower incidence of skin rash than Brown Norway rats. The treated PD-1m/m rats developed more severe liver injury than PD-1−/− mice, but in contrast to expectations, they did not develop a skin rash. Functional knockouts provide a unique tool to study the mechanisms of IDRs.
Funder
Government of Canada
Genome Canada and Ontario Genomics
Canadian Institutes of Health Research
Pfizer Canada
Ontario Graduate Scholarship
Glaxo-Wellcome Sunnybrook Drug Safety Clinic Graduate Student
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)