PF-1355, a mechanism-based myeloperoxidase inhibitor, prevents immune complex vasculitis and anti-glomerular basement membrane glomerulonephritis.

J Pharmacol Exp Ther

Pfizer World Wide Research and Development, Cambridge, Massachusetts (W.Z., R.R., C.S., C.C., A.S., J.W., K.A., A.K., D.S., T.S.M., Y.Z., B.K., L.B.); Department of Pathology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan (R.W., K.J.); and Pfizer World Wide Research and Development, Groton, Connecticut (P.D.B., C.O., W.B., T.K., T.C., S.B.)

Published: May 2015

AI Article Synopsis

  • Small vessel vasculitis is a serious condition that primarily affects the kidneys and lungs, resulting from neutrophil activation and oxidative damage driven by myeloperoxidase (MPO).
  • MPO is implicated in vascular injury through various mechanisms, including impairment of blood flow, oxidative damage contributing to atherosclerosis, and promoting the formation of harmful structures that can block blood vessels.
  • The study introduces PF-1355, a selective MPO inhibitor, which showed promising results in mouse models by reducing MPO activity and alleviating symptoms of vasculitis, suggesting potential for treating similar human diseases.

Article Abstract

Small vessel vasculitis is a life-threatening condition and patients typically present with renal and pulmonary injury. Disease pathogenesis is associated with neutrophil accumulation, activation, and oxidative damage, the latter being driven in large part by myeloperoxidase (MPO), which generates hypochlorous acid among other oxidants. MPO has been associated with vasculitis, disseminated vascular inflammation typically involving pulmonary and renal microvasculature and often resulting in critical consequences. MPO contributes to vascular injury by 1) catabolizing nitric oxide, impairing vasomotor function; 2) causing oxidative damage to lipoproteins and endothelial cells, leading to atherosclerosis; and 3) stimulating formation of neutrophil extracellular traps, resulting in vessel occlusion and thrombosis. Here we report a selective 2-thiouracil mechanism-based MPO inhibitor (PF-1355 [2-(6-(2,5-dimethoxyphenyl)-4-oxo-2-thioxo-3,4-dihydropyrimidin-1(2H)-yl)acetamide) and demonstrate that MPO is a critical mediator of vasculitis in mouse disease models. A pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic response model of PF-1355 exposure in relation with MPO activity was derived from mouse peritonitis. The contribution of MPO activity to vasculitis was then examined in an immune complex model of pulmonary disease. Oral administration of PF-1355 reduced plasma MPO activity, vascular edema, neutrophil recruitment, and elevated circulating cytokines. In a model of anti-glomerular basement membrane disease, formerly known as Goodpasture disease, albuminuria and chronic renal dysfunction were completely suppressed by PF-1355 treatment. This study shows that MPO activity is critical in driving immune complex vasculitis and provides confidence in testing the hypothesis that MPO inhibition will provide benefit in treating human vasculitic diseases.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1124/jpet.114.221788DOI Listing

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