Abstract

It is widely accepted that small-molecule drugs, despite their selectivity at primary targets, exert pharmacological effects (and safety liabilities) through a multiplicity of pathways. As such, it has proved extremely difficult to experimentally assess polypharmacology in an agnostic fashion. Profiling of metabolites produced as part of physiological responses to pharmacological stimuli provides a unique opportunity to explore drug pharmacology. A total of 122 eicosanoid lipids in human whole blood were monitored from 10 different donors upon stimulation with several inducers of immunological responses and treatment with modulators of prostaglandin (PG) and leukotriene biosynthesis, including clinical and investigational molecules. Such analysis revealed differentiation between drugs nominally targeting different eicosanoid biosynthetic enzymes, or even those designed to target the same enzyme. Profiled agents, some of them marketed products, affect eicosanoid biosynthesis in ways that cannot be predicted from information on their intended targets. As an example, we used this platform to discriminate drugs based on their ability to silence PG biosynthesis in response to bacterial lipopolysaccharide, resulting in differential pharmacological activity in an in vivo model of endotoxemia. Some of the observed effects are subject to variability among individuals, indicating a potential application of this methodology to the patient stratification, based on their responses to benchmark drugs and experimental compounds read on the eicosanome via a simple blood test.

Highlights

  • It is widely accepted that small-molecule drugs, despite their selectivity at primary targets, exert pharmacological effects through a multiplicity of pathways

  • We describe a molecular phenotyping study of human whole blood (HWB), by analysis of eicosanoid lipids derived from the conversion of membrane phospholipids to arachidonic acid (AA), an early and critical event in the initiation and establishment of multiple inflammatory responses

  • Depending on the cell type, AA and other long fatty acyl chain lipids can be converted through enzymatic and nonenzymatic reactions into multiple species that can be grouped into two main classes: [1] PGs derived from the initial production of prostaglandin A (PGA) by cyclooxygenases 1 and 2 (COX1/2) and [2] LTs derived from the initial intermediate leukotriene A4 (LTA4), produced through the combined action of 5-lipoxygenase (5-LOX) and its accessory protein, 5-LOX activating protein (FLAP)

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Summary

Phenotyping drug polypharmacology via eicosanoid profiling of blood

Discovery Sciences* and Immunology Research,† Janssen Research & Development, LLC, San Diego, CA; and Skaggs School of Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences,§ University of California, San Diego, San Diego, CA

Lipidomics profiling
Compound treatments
Metabolic phenotyping
Effect of disease relevant stimuli on eicosanoids
Human drug response differentiation
Intersubject variability
Predicting in vivo pharmacology from lipidomics signatures
Findings
DISCUSSION
Full Text
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