Pharmacokinetics and tumor disposition of PEGylated, methotrexate conjugated poly-l-lysine dendrimers


Autoria(s): Kaminskas, Lisa M.; Kelly, Brian D.; McLeod, Victoria M.; Boyd, Ben J.; Krippner, Guy Y.; Williams, Elizabeth D.; Porter, Christopher J. H.
Data(s)

19/05/2009

Resumo

Dendrimers have potential for delivering chemotherapeutic drugs to solid tumours via the enhanced permeation and retention (EPR) effect. The impact of conjugation of hydrophobic anticancer drugs to hydrophilic PEGylated dendrimer surfaces, however, has not been fully investigated. The current study has therefore characterised the effect on dendrimer disposition of conjugating α-carboxyl protected methotrexate (MTX) to a series of PEGylated 3H-labelled poly-L-lysine dendrimers ranging in size from generation 3 (G3) to 5 (G5) in rats. Dendrimers contained 50% surface PEG and 50% surface MTX. Conjugation of MTX generally increased plasma clearance when compared to conjugation with PEG alone. Conversely, increasing generation reduced clearance, increased metabolic stability and reduced renal elimination of the administered radiolabel. For constructs with molecular weights >20 kDa increasing the molecular weight of conjugated PEG also reduced clearance and enhanced metabolic stability but had only a minimal effect on renal elimination. Tissue distribution studies revealed retention of MTX conjugated smaller (G3-G4) PEG570 dendrimers (or their metabolic products) in the kidneys. In contrast, the larger G5 dendrimer was concentrated more in the liver and spleen. The G5 PEG1100 dendrimer was also shown to accumulate in solid Walker 256 and HT1080 tumours and comparative disposition data in both rats (1 to 2% dose/g in tumour) and mice (11% dose/g in tumour) are presented. The results of this study further illustrate the potential utility of biodegradable PEGylated poly-L-lysine dendrimers as long circulating vectors for the delivery and tumour-targeting of hydrophobic drugs.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/77751/

Publicador

American Chemical Society

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/77751/1/Kaminskas%2C_Molecular_Pharmaceutics%2C_2009_%28prepub%29.pdf

DOI:10.1021/mp900049a

Kaminskas, Lisa M., Kelly, Brian D., McLeod, Victoria M., Boyd, Ben J., Krippner, Guy Y., Williams, Elizabeth D., & Porter, Christopher J. H. (2009) Pharmacokinetics and tumor disposition of PEGylated, methotrexate conjugated poly-l-lysine dendrimers. Molecular Pharmaceutics, 6(4), pp. 1190-1204.

Direitos

Copyright © 2009 American Chemical Society

This document is the Accepted Manuscript version of a Published Work that appeared in final form in Molecular Pharmaceutics, copyright © American Chemical Society after peer review and technical editing by the publisher. To access the final edited and published work see http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/mp900049a

Fonte

School of Biomedical Sciences; Faculty of Health; Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation

Palavras-Chave #111201 Cancer Cell Biology #pharmacokinetics #tumor disposition #PEGylated, methotrexate conjugated poly-L-lysine dendrimers #molecular pharmaceutics #methotrexate/PEG-poly-L-lysine dendrimers
Tipo

Journal Article