The objective of this pilot study was to explore whether administration of a catalytic antioxidant, AEOL 10150 (C48H56C15MnN12), could reduce radiation-induced lung injury and improve overall survival when administered after 11.5 Gy of whole thorax lung irradiation in a non-human primate model. Thirteen animals were irradiated with a single exposure of 11.5 Gy, prescribed to midplane, and delivered with 6 MV photons at a dose rate of 0.8 Gy min. Beginning at 24 h post irradiation, the AEOL 10150 cohort (n = 7) received daily subcutaneous injections of the catalytic antioxidant at a concentration of 5 mg kg for a total of 4 wk. All animals received medical management, including dexamethasone, based on clinical signs during the planned 180-d in-life phase of the study. All decedent study animals were euthanized for failure to maintain saturation of peripheral oxygen > 88% on room air. Exposure of the whole thorax to 11.5 Gy resulted in radiation-induced lung injury in all animals. AEOL 10150, as administered in this pilot study, demonstrated potential efficacy as a mitigator against fatal radiation-induced lung injury. Treatment with the drug resulted in 28.6% survival following exposure to a radiation dose that proved to be 100% fatal in the control cohort (n = 6). Computed tomography scans demonstrated less quantitative radiographic injury (pneumonitis, fibrosis, effusions) in the AEOL 10150-treated cohort at day 60 post-exposure, and AEOL 10150-treated animals required less dexamethasone support during the in-life phase of the study. Analysis of serial plasma samples suggested that AEOL 10150 treatment led to lower relative transforming growth factor-Beta-1 levels when compared with the control animals. The results of this pilot study demonstrate that treatment with AEOL 10150 results in reduced clinical, radiographic, anatomic, and molecular evidence of radiation-induced lung injury and merits further study as a medical countermeasure against radiation-induced pulmonary injury.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/HP.0b013e3182a4d967 | DOI Listing |
J Pharmacol Exp Ther
January 2024
Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of Colorado, Anschutz Medical Campus, Aurora, Colorado (L.-P.L., J.N.P.-S., B.J.D., M.P.); and Department of Medicine, National Jewish Health, Denver, Colorado (B.J.D.)
Reactive oxygen species have an emerging role in the pathologic consequences of status epilepticus. We have previously demonstrated the efficacy of a water-for-injection formulation of the -porphyrin catalytic antioxidant, manganese (III) -tetrakis (--diethylimidazole) porphyrin (AEOL10150) against oxidative stress, neuroinflammation, and neuronal death initiated by kainic acid, pilocarpine, diisopropylflurophosphate (DFP), and soman. This previous dose and dosing strategy of AEOL10150 required smaller multiple daily injections, precluding our ability to test its efficacy against delayed consequences of nerve agent exposure such as neurodegeneration and cognitive dysfunction.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHealth Phys
October 2021
Department of Radiation Oncology, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD 21201.
To study the molecular and cellular mechanisms of radiation-induced lung injury (RILI) in a non-human primate model, Rhesus macaques were irradiated with lethal doses of radiation to the whole thorax. A subset of the irradiated animals was treated with AEOL 10150, a potent catalytic scavenger of reactive oxygen and nitrogen species. Lung tissues were collected at necropsy for molecular and immunohistochemical (IHC) studies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Inorg Biochem
January 2021
Faculty of Chemistry, Kim Il Sung University, Pyongyang, Democratic People's Republic of Korea.
The AEOL series of manganoporphyrins (MnP; AEOL compounds were named by US Aeolus pharmaceuticals) designed as superoxide dismutase mimic are well-known for their powerful catalytic activity to neutralize reactive oxygen and nitrogen species. Reductive oxygen atom cleavage from peroxynitrite (ONOO) to form NO in aqueous solution by some AEOL compounds (AEOL-10113, AEOL-10150, AEOL-11114 and AEOL-11203) was studied by DFT/M06-2X computations with D3 dispersion correction and gCP (geometrical counterpoise correction) for basis set superposition error. DFT computation showed that AEOL-10150 can form the most stable association complex {MnPOONO} among four AEOL models.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAntioxidants (Basel)
October 2020
Department of Pharmacology, UCLA School of Medicine, 264 El Camino Drive, Beverly Hills, CA 90212, USA.
Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) is characterized by massive inflammation of the arterial endothelium accompanied by vasoconstriction and widespread pulmonary micro thrombi. As a result, due to the destruction of nitric oxide (NO) by inflammatory superoxide (O), pulmonary NO concentration ceases, resulting in uncontrolled platelet aggregation and massive thrombosis, which kills the patients. Introducing NO by inhalation (INO) may replace the loss of endothelium-derived NO.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRadiat Res
July 2020
Department of Radiation Oncology, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland, 21201.
Inflammatory cytokines have been suggested to play important roles in radiation-induced lung injury (RILI). Identifying significantly changed circulating and tissue cytokines after thoracic irradiation will aid in deciphering the mechanism of RILI and identifying potential biomarkers to predict clinical outcome. Herein, the levels of 24 cytokines were measured in serial plasma samples and lung tissue samples collected from a pilot study where nonhuman primates (NHPs) received 11.
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