| Literature DB >> 26257774 |
Simon C Johnson1, Melana E Yanos2, Alessandro Bitto3, Anthony Castanza3, Arni Gagnidze3, Brenda Gonzalez4, Kanav Gupta3, Jessica Hui3, Conner Jarvie3, Brittany M Johnson3, Nicolas Letexier3, Lanny McCanta3, Maya Sangesland3, Oliver Tamis3, Lauren Uhde3, Alex Van Den Ende3, Peter S Rabinovitch3, Yousin Suh4, Matt Kaeberlein3.
Abstract
Rapamycin extends lifespan and attenuates age-related pathologies in mice when administered through diet at 14 parts per million (PPM). Recently, we reported that daily intraperitoneal injection of rapamycin at 8 mg/kg attenuates mitochondrial disease symptoms and progression in the Ndufs4 knockout mouse model of Leigh Syndrome. Although rapamycin is a widely used pharmaceutical agent dosage has not been rigorously examined and no dose-response profile has been established. Given these observations we sought to determine if increased doses of oral rapamycin would result in more robust impact on mTOR driven parameters. To test this hypothesis, we compared the effects of dietary rapamycin at doses ranging from 14 to 378 PPM on developmental weight in control and Ndufs4 knockout mice and on health and survival in the Ndufs4 knockout model. High dose rapamycin was well tolerated, dramatically reduced weight gain during development, and overcame gender differences. The highest oral dose, approximately 27-times the dose shown to extend murine lifespan, increased survival in Ndufs4 knockout mice similarly to daily rapamycin injection without observable adverse effects. These findings have broad implications for the effective use of rapamycin in murine studies and for the translational potential of rapamycin in the treatment of mitochondrial disease. This data, further supported by a comparison of available literature, suggests that 14 PPM dietary rapamycin is a sub-optimal dose for targeting mTOR systemically in mice. Our findings suggest that the role of mTOR in mammalian biology may be broadly underestimated when determined through treatment with rapamycin at commonly used doses.Entities:
Keywords: aging; mTOR; mitochondrial disease; pharmaceutical intervention; rapamycin
Year: 2015 PMID: 26257774 PMCID: PMC4510413 DOI: 10.3389/fgene.2015.00247
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Genet ISSN: 1664-8021 Impact factor: 4.599
Figure 1Blood levels of rapamycin resulting from dietary and IP injection delivery. Blood levels of rapamycin in mice treated with dietary rapamycin or intraperitoneal injection as indicated. Dietary concentration to blood level relationship shown in inlayed graph; linear regression generated using 14, 42, and 126 PPM data with 95% confidence intervals, correlation co-efficient, and correlation p-value indicated. All error bars represent SEM.
Figure 2Rapamycin reduces developmental weight gain in a dose-dependent manner. Control male (A,B) and female (C,D) mice treated with dietary rapamycin from weaning (approximately post-natal day 21). Rate calculated from post-natal day 25–30 was reduced in a dose-dependent manner in both genders. Eudragit (encapsulation material) alone at a quantity equivalent to that in 378 PPM rapamycin chow had no impact on developmental weight gain. Male and female mice treated with 378 PPM dietary rapamycin show similar weight curves and developmental weight gain rates. Rapamycin injection—8 mg/kg/day IP injection. Error bars represent SEM. **p < 0.005; n.s., not significant.
Figure 3High-dose dietary rapamycin attenuates disease and enhances survival in . Dietary rapamycin reduces developmental weight gain and attenuates the progressive weight loss phenotype in a dose-dependent manner (A,B). Dietary rapamycin improves survival in a dose-dependent manner (C). The effect of 378 PPM dietary rapamycin on weight is slightly greater than daily IP rapamycin injection while IP injection resulted in a greater increase in median and maximum survival (D). The oldest mouse in the 378 PPM group was euthanized due to lack of chow and was still healthy by gross observation at the time of euthanasia. Rapamycin injection—8 mg/kg/day IP injection. Error bars represent SEM. **p < 0.005. 378, but not 42, PPM treatment significantly increased survival by Log-rank test (p = 0.086 and 0.006 for 42 and 378 PPM, respectively; IP injection shown for reference, previously reported elsewhere) (Johnson et al., 2013b).
Figure 4Impact of high-dose dietary rapamycin on . (A) High-dose rapamycin provides some benefit to survival when initiated at P35 without impacting developmental weight (B). Control animals in (A) only include those surviving past P35. Survival of mice treated starting at P35 is significantly greater than control treated animals (p = 0.0002, Log-rank test).
Figure 5A comparison of rapamycin blood levels in studies using dietary rapamycin treatment. (A) Blood levels of rapamycin reported in studies using dietary treatment (black datapoints) and in our study (colored datapoints). (B) A comparison of reported blood levels in studies using 14 PPM dietary rapamycin with the initial ITP report (Harrison et al.) and the 2013 report suggesting few benefits to aging parameters (Neff et al.) indicated. Bar and whiskers represent median and interquartile range of published blood levels for 14 PPM rapamycin. Reported limit of detection by HPLC indicated by dashed line.
A comparison of published studies utilizing dietary encapsulated rapamycin.
| 4.7, 14, 42 PPM | Female: 7, 16, 80 ng/ml | UM-HET3 | Aging | Miller et al., |
| 14 PPM | Female: ~5 ng/ml | C57Bl/6J and | Aging | Fok et al., |
| 14 PPM | 3–5 ng/ml | C57Bl/6NIA | Aging | Zhang et al., |
| 14, 42 PPM | 37, 170 ng/ml | ApcMIN | Cancer | Hasty et al., |
| 14 PPM | 10–12 ng/ml | TrJ | Nerve mylenation | Nicks et al., |
| 14 PPM | Females: 3.9 ng/ml | Rb1+/− | Cancer | Livi et al., |
| 14 PPM | 4.57 ng/ml ( | C57Bl/6J | Cancer | Neff et al., |
| 4.7, 14, and | 6.5, 13.4, and | UM-HET3 | Aging | Wilkinson et al., |
| Oral | >3000 ng/ml, no | CD1 | Cancer | Bisht et al., |
| 14, 42, 126, | 13, 125, 402, | C57Bl/6NIA | Developmental weight, disease | Data here |
The original publication demonstrating murine lifespan extension by microencapsulated rapamycin in bold. Bisht et al., study provided for reference as the highest level of rapamycin reported in mice and no overt toxicity was observed. UM-HET3—genetically heterogenous mice produced from a four-way cross. C57Bl/6 substrain (National Institute on Aging, NIA, vs. Jackson laboratory, J) as indicated.