P25 Utrophin luciferase knock-in mouse model for in vivo assessment of drug efficacy in preclinical trials for utrophin upregulation

2010 ◽  
Vol 20 ◽  
pp. S12
Author(s):  
R.J. Fairclough ◽  
K.E. Davies
2018 ◽  
pp. 1
Author(s):  
Yuki Izawa-Ishizawa ◽  
Masaki Imanishi ◽  
Yoshito Zamami ◽  
Hiroki Toya ◽  
Tomoko Nagao ◽  
...  

mSystems ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 5 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Michelle M. Bellerose ◽  
Megan K. Proulx ◽  
Clare M. Smith ◽  
Richard E. Baker ◽  
Thomas R. Ioerger ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Effective tuberculosis treatment requires at least 6 months of combination therapy. Alterations in the physiological state of the bacterium during infection are thought to reduce drug efficacy and prolong the necessary treatment period, but the nature of these adaptations remain incompletely defined. To identify specific bacterial functions that limit drug effects during infection, we employed a comprehensive genetic screening approach to identify mutants with altered susceptibility to the first-line antibiotics in the mouse model. We identified many mutations that increase the rate of bacterial clearance, suggesting new strategies for accelerating therapy. In addition, the drug-specific effects of these mutations suggested that different antibiotics are limited by distinct factors. Rifampin efficacy is inferred to be limited by cellular permeability, whereas isoniazid is preferentially affected by replication rate. Many mutations that altered bacterial clearance in the mouse model did not have an obvious effect on drug susceptibility using in vitro assays, indicating that these chemical-genetic interactions tend to be specific to the in vivo environment. This observation suggested that a wide variety of natural genetic variants could influence drug efficacy in vivo without altering behavior in standard drug-susceptibility tests. Indeed, mutations in a number of the genes identified in our study are enriched in drug-resistant clinical isolates, identifying genetic variants that may influence treatment outcome. Together, these observations suggest new avenues for improving therapy, as well as the mechanisms of genetic adaptations that limit it. IMPORTANCE Understanding how Mycobacterium tuberculosis survives during antibiotic treatment is necessary to rationally devise more effective tuberculosis (TB) chemotherapy regimens. Using genome-wide mutant fitness profiling and the mouse model of TB, we identified genes that alter antibiotic efficacy specifically in the infection environment and associated several of these genes with natural genetic variants found in drug-resistant clinical isolates. These data suggest strategies for synergistic therapies that accelerate bacterial clearance, and they identify mechanisms of adaptation to drug exposure that could influence treatment outcome.


Blood ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 136 (6) ◽  
pp. 740-748 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephen Ferrière ◽  
Ivan Peyron ◽  
Olivier D. Christophe ◽  
Charlotte Kawecki ◽  
Caterina Casari ◽  
...  

Abstract The bispecific antibody emicizumab is increasingly used for hemophilia A treatment. However, its specificity for human factors IX and X (FIX and FX) has limited its in vivo functional analysis to primate models of acquired hemophilia. Here, we describe a novel mouse model that allows emicizumab function to be examined. Briefly, FVIII-deficient mice received IV emicizumab 24 hours before tail-clip bleeding was performed. A second infusion with human FIX and FX, administered 5 minutes before bleeding, generated consistent levels of emicizumab (0.7-19 mg/dL for 0.5-10 mg/kg doses) and of both FIX and FX (85 and 101 U/dL, respectively, after dosing at 100 U/kg). Plasma from these mice display FVIII-like activity in assays (diluted activated partial thromboplastin time and thrombin generation), similar to human samples containing emicizumab. Emicizumab doses of 1.5 mg/kg and higher significantly reduced blood loss in a tail-clip–bleeding model using FVIII-deficient mice. However, reduction was incomplete compared with mice treated with human FVIII concentrate, and no difference in efficacy between doses was observed. From this model, we deducted FVIII-like activity from emicizumab that corresponded to a dose of 4.5 U of FVIII per kilogram (ie, 9.0 U/dL). Interestingly, combined with a low FVIII dose (5 U/kg), emicizumab provided enough additive activity to allow complete bleeding arrest. This model could be useful for further in vivo analysis of emicizumab.


2012 ◽  
Vol 203 (2) ◽  
pp. 292-297 ◽  
Author(s):  
Silvan M. Klein ◽  
Jody Vykoukal ◽  
Philipp Lechler ◽  
Katharina Zeitler ◽  
Sebastian Gehmert ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Vol 47 (5) ◽  
pp. 1260-1267 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dan Wu ◽  
Jun Lei ◽  
Bei Jia ◽  
Han Xie ◽  
Yan Zhu ◽  
...  

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