Literature DB >> 19159823

The pharmacodynamic effect of sirolimus: individual variation of cytokine mRNA expression profiles in human whole blood samples.

Michael Müller-Steinhardt1, Kristina Wortmeier, Lutz Fricke, Brigitte Ebel, Christoph Härtel.   

Abstract

Sirolimus (SRL) has become an important alternative to calcineurin inhibitors due to its unique mechanism of action. Since rejection and poor graft outcome are still frequent problems despite therapeutic-range blood concentrations, pharmacodynamic measurements of its immunosuppressive effects would be of great clinical value to optimize treatment in individual patients. We performed a human whole blood assay using real time cytokine RT-PCR for the pharmacodynamic assessment of SRL. IL-2, IL-4 and IL-6 mRNA levels were quantitatively determined upon T-cell-specific stimulation in healthy individuals (n=11; in vitro) and in kidney-transplant patients (n=3; ex vivo). Furthermore, IL-2 protein secretion and T-cell proliferation was measured. After 24h incubation we observed a stronger suppression of IL-2 and IL-4 mRNA expression upon SRL addition (p<0.005; p<0.005) versus 4h (p<0.05; p<0.05). SRL effects displayed a remarkable interindividual variation, which proved to be independent of the concentration applied. Notably, 3/11 and 2/11 individuals had unaffected IL-2 and IL-4 mRNA expression after 4h incubation with SRL, respectively. In contrast, a general suppression of IL-2 protein secretion and T-cell proliferation was induced. Analysis of kidney-transplant patients verified interindividual variation and proved comparability of in vitro and ex vivo effects. We describe an individual degree of SRL-sensitivity that may correlate with clinical efficacy. Rather than analysis of one single peak, we suggest determination of two absolute cytokine mRNA peak levels for the pharmacodynamic assessment of SRL. However, prospective clinical studies are necessary to determine whether individual degrees of SRL-sensitivity correlate with clinical outcome.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2008        PMID: 19159823     DOI: 10.1016/j.imbio.2008.04.002

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Immunobiology        ISSN: 0171-2985            Impact factor:   3.144


  3 in total

1.  A composite score associated with spontaneous operational tolerance in kidney transplant recipients.

Authors:  Richard Danger; Mélanie Chesneau; Chloé Paul; Pierrick Guérif; Maxim Durand; Kenneth A Newell; Sai Kanaparthi; Laurence A Turka; Jean-Paul Soulillou; Rémi Houlgatte; Magali Giral; Gérard Ramstein; Sophie Brouard
Journal:  Kidney Int       Date:  2017-02-24       Impact factor: 10.612

2.  Monitoring molecular-specific pharmacodynamics of rapamycin in vivo with inducible Gal4->Fluc transgenic reporter mice.

Authors:  Mei-Hsiu Pan; Jeffrey Lin; Julie L Prior; David Piwnica-Worms
Journal:  Mol Cancer Ther       Date:  2010-09-21       Impact factor: 6.261

3.  A human in vitro whole blood assay to predict the systemic cytokine response to therapeutic oligonucleotides including siRNA.

Authors:  Christoph Coch; Christian Lück; Anna Schwickart; Bastian Putschli; Marcel Renn; Tobias Höller; Winfried Barchet; Gunther Hartmann; Martin Schlee
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2013-08-05       Impact factor: 3.240

  3 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.