In Vivo Pharmacokinetic and Pharmacodynamic Properties of the Antiarrhythmic Molecule ent-Verticilide [Drug Discovery and Translational Medicine]

Abstract

The unnatural verticilide enantiomer (ent-verticilide) is a selective and potent inhibitor of cardiac ryanodine receptor (RyR2) calcium release channels and exhibits antiarrhythmic activity in a murine model of catecholaminergic polymorphic ventricular tachycardia (CPVT). To determine verticilide’s pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic properties in vivo, we developed a bioassay to measure nat- and ent-verticilide in murine plasma and correlated plasma concentrations with antiarrhythmic efficacy in a mouse model of CPVT. nat-Verticilide rapidly degraded in plasma in vitro, showing >95% degradation within 5 minutes, whereas ent-verticilide showed <1% degradation over 6 hours. Plasma was collected from mice following intraperitoneal administration of ent-verticilide at two doses (3 mg/kg, 30 mg/kg). Peak Cmax and area under the plasma-concentration time curve (AUC) scaled proportionally to dose, and the half-life was 6.9 hours for the 3-mg/kg dose and 6.4 hours for the 30-mg/kg dose. Antiarrhythmic efficacy was examined using a catecholamine challenge protocol at time points ranging from 5 to 1440 minutes after intraperitoneal dosing. ent-Verticilide inhibited ventricular arrhythmias as early as 7 minutes after administration in a concentration-dependent manner, with an estimated potency (IC50) of 266 ng/ml (312 nM) and an estimated maximum inhibitory effect of 93.5%. Unlike the US Food and Drug Administration-approved pan-RyR blocker dantrolene, the RyR2-selective blocker ent-verticilide (30 mg/kg) did not reduce skeletal muscle strength in vivo. We conclude that ent-verticilide has favorable pharmacokinetic properties and reduces ventricular arrhythmias with an estimated potency in the nanomolar range, warranting further drug development.

SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT ent-Verticilide has therapeutic potential to treat cardiac arrhythmias, but little is known about its pharmacological profile in vivo. The primary purpose of this study is to determine the systemic exposure and pharmacokinetics of ent-verticilide in mice and estimate its efficacy and potency in vivo. The current work suggests ent-verticilide has favorable pharmacokinetic properties and reduces ventricular arrhythmias with an estimated potency in the nanomolar range, warranting further drug development.

FootnotesReceived September 22, 2022.Accepted February 24, 2023.

This research was supported in part by National Institutes of Health National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute [Grant R35-HL144980] (to B.C.K.), [Grant R01-HL151223] (to J.N.J. and B.C.K.), and [Grant F31-HL151125] (to A.N.S.); the PhRMA Foundation Postdoctoral Fellowship (to D.J.B.); the American Heart Association Arrhythmia and Sudden Death Strategically Focused Research Network [Grant 19SFRN34830019] (to W.S.A. and B.C.K.); and the Leducq Foundation [Grant 18CVD05] (to B.C.K.).

No author has an actual or perceived conflict of interest with the contents of this article.

dx.doi.org/10.1124/jpet.122.001455.

Embedded ImageEmbedded ImageThis article has supplemental material available at jpet.aspetjournals.org.

Copyright © 2023 by The American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics

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