Shedding Light on Drug-Induced Liver Injury: Activation of T Cells From Drug Naive Human Donors With Tolvaptan and a Hydroxybutyric Acid Metabolite

Author:

Hammond Sean1,Gibson Andrew1,Jaruthamsophon Kanoot12,Roth Sharin3,Mosedale Merrie4ORCID,Naisbitt Dean J1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. MRC Centre for Drug Safety Science, Department of Molecular and Clinical Pharmacology, University of Liverpool, Liverpool L69 3GE, UK

2. Department of Pathology, Faculty of Medicine, Prince of Songkla University, Songkhla, Thailand

3. Otsuka Pharmaceutical Dev. & Comm., Inc., Research Blvd, Rockville, Maryland 20882

4. Division of Pharmacotherapy and Experimental Therapeutics, UNC Eshelman School of Pharmacy, Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27599

Abstract

Abstract Exposure to tolvaptan is associated with a significant risk of liver injury in a small fraction of patients with autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease. The observed delayed onset of liver injury of between 3 and 18 months after commencing tolvaptan treatment, along with rapid recurrence of symptoms following re-challenge is indicative of an adaptive immune attack. This study set out to assess the intrinsic immunogenicity of tolvaptan and pathways of drug-specific T-cell activation using in vitro cell culture platforms. Tolvaptan (n = 7), as well as oxybutyric (DM-4103, n = 1) and hydroxybutyric acid (DM-4107, n = 18) metabolite-specific T-cell clones were generated from tolvaptan naive healthy donor peripheral blood mononuclear cells. Tolvaptan and DM-4103 T-cell clones could also be activated with DM-4107, whereas T-cell clones originally primed with DM-4107 were highly specific to this compound. A signature cytokine profile (IFN-γ, IL-13, granzyme B, and perforin) for almost all T-cell clones was identified. Mechanistically, compound-specific T-cell clone activation was dependent on the presence of soluble drug and could occur within 4 h of drug exposure, ruling out a classical hapten mechanism. However, antigen processing dependence drug presentation was indicated in many T-cell clones. Collectively these data show that tolvaptan-associated liver injury may be attributable to an adaptive immune attack upon the liver, with tolvaptan- and metabolite-specific T cells identified as candidate effector cells in such etiology.

Funder

Medical Research Council

Centre for Drug Safety Science

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Toxicology

Reference40 articles.

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