Abstract

BackgroundThis study examines the biophysical and preclinical pulmonary activity of synthetic lung surfactants containing novel phospholipase-resistant phosphonolipids or synthetic glycerophospholipids combined with Super Mini-B (S-MB) DATK and/or SP-Css ion-lock 1 peptides that replicate the functional biophysics of surfactant proteins (SP)-B and SP-C. Phospholipase-resistant phosphonolipids used in synthetic surfactants are DEPN-8 and PG-1, molecular analogs of dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine (DPPC) and palmitoyl-oleoyl phosphatidylglycerol (POPG), while glycerophospholipids used are active lipid components of native surfactant (DPPC:POPC:POPG 5:3:2 by weight). The objective of the work is to test whether these novel lipid/peptide synthetic surfactants have favorable preclinical activity (biophysical, pulmonary) for therapeutic use in reversing surfactant deficiency or dysfunction in lung disease or injury.MethodsSurface activity of synthetic lipid/peptide surfactants was assessed in vitro at 37 °C by measuring adsorption in a stirred subphase apparatus and dynamic surface tension lowering in pulsating and captive bubble surfactometers. Shear viscosity was measured as a function of shear rate on a Wells-Brookfield micro-viscometer. In vivo pulmonary activity was determined by measuring lung function (arterial oxygenation, dynamic lung compliance) in ventilated rats and rabbits with surfactant deficiency/dysfunction induced by saline lavage to lower arterial PO2 to <100 mmHg, consistent with clinical acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS).ResultsSynthetic surfactants containing 5:3:2 DPPC:POPC:POPG or 9:1 DEPN-8:PG-1 combined with 3% (by wt) of S-MB DATK, 3% SP-Css ion-lock 1, or 1.5% each of both peptides all adsorbed rapidly to low equilibrium surface tensions and also reduced surface tension to ≤1 mN/m under dynamic compression at 37 °C. However, dual-peptide surfactants containing 1.5% S-MB DATK + 1.5% SP-Css ion-lock 1 combined with 9:1 DEPN-8:PG-1 or 5:3:2 DPPC:POPC:POPG had the greatest in vivo activity in improving arterial oxygenation and dynamic lung compliance in ventilated animals with ARDS. Saline dispersions of these dual-peptide synthetic surfactants were also found to have shear viscosities comparable to or below those of current animal-derived surfactant drugs, supporting their potential ease of deliverability by instillation in future clinical applications.DiscussionOur findings support the potential of dual-peptide synthetic lipid/peptide surfactants containing S-MB DATK + SP-Css ion-lock 1 for treating diseases of surfactant deficiency or dysfunction. Moreover, phospholipase-resistant dual-peptide surfactants containing DEPN-8/PG-1 may have particular applications in treating direct forms of ARDS where endogenous phospholipases are present in the lungs.

Highlights

  • Therapy with exogenous surfactant drugs has proven to be life-saving in preventing or treating respiratory distress syndrome (RDS) in preterm infants (Notter, 2000; Polin et al, 2014), and extensive research has been directed at extending this intervention to pediatric and adult patients with acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) (Raghavendran, Willson & Notter, 2011; Zhang et al, 2013)

  • Synthetic surfactants containing 9:1 DEPN-8:PG-1 or 5:3:2 dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine (DPPC):POPC:POPG combined with 1.5% Super Mini-B (S-MB) DATK + 1.5% surfactant proteins (SP)-Css ion-lock 1

  • Synthetic lipid/peptide surfactants containing 9:1 DEPN-8:PG-1 or 5:3:2 DPPC:POPC:POPG combined with 3% SP-Css ion-lock 1 peptide alone had lower but still substantial adsorption facility, reaching surface pressures of ∼36 mN/m after 60 sec and ∼44 mN/m at final equilibrium

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Summary

Introduction

Therapy with exogenous surfactant drugs has proven to be life-saving in preventing or treating respiratory distress syndrome (RDS) in preterm infants (Notter, 2000; Polin et al, 2014), and extensive research has been directed at extending this intervention to pediatric and adult patients with acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) (Raghavendran, Willson & Notter, 2011; Zhang et al, 2013). Synthetic surfactants containing 5:3:2 DPPC:POPC:POPG or 9:1 DEPN8:PG-1 combined with 3% (by wt) of S-MB DATK, 3% SP-Css ion-lock 1, or 1.5% each of both peptides all adsorbed rapidly to low equilibrium surface tensions and reduced surface tension to ≤1 mN/m under dynamic compression at 37 ◦C. Dual-peptide surfactants containing 1.5% S-MB DATK + 1.5% SP-Css ion-lock 1 combined with 9:1 DEPN-8:PG-1 or 5:3:2 DPPC:POPC:POPG had the greatest in vivo activity in improving arterial oxygenation and dynamic lung compliance in ventilated animals with ARDS. Saline dispersions of these dual-peptide synthetic surfactants were found to have shear viscosities comparable to or below

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