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Pharmacokinetics and Absorption, Distribution, Metabolism and Excretion of RGLS4326 in Mouse and Monkey, an anti-miR-17 Oligonucleotide for the Treatment of Polycystic Kidney Disease

Amin Kamel, Tate Owen, Izaiah Cole, Tania Valencia and Edmund C Lee
Drug Metabolism and Disposition August 29, 2023, DMD-AR-2023-001446; DOI: https://doi.org/10.1124/dmd.123.001446
Amin Kamel
1Drug Metabolism and Pharmacokinetics, Regulus Therapeutics, Inc., United States
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  • For correspondence: akamel@regulusrx.com
Tate Owen
2Regulus Therapeutics, United States
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Izaiah Cole
3Regulus Therapeutics, Inc., United States
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Tania Valencia
4elee@regulusrx.com, United States
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Edmund C Lee
4elee@regulusrx.com, United States
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Abstract

RGLS4326 is a short oligonucleotide inhibitor of microRNA-17 (miR-17) that preferentially distributes to the kidney and displaces miR-17 from translationally active polysomes. Here, we present pharmacokinetics and absorption, distribution, metabolism, and excretion properties of RGLS4326 from mouse and monkey. RGLS4326 was absorbed rapidly after subcutaneous (SC) administration, distributed extensively to the kidney and liver, with preferential distribution to the kidney, and cleared rapidly from plasma by tissue uptake and renal excretion. Plasma exposure increased in a dose proportional manner with no notable accumulation after repeat doses. Plasma protein binding of RGLS4326 across all species tested was between 79 and 96%. RGLS4326 predominantly distributed to the kidney with a long half-life (t1/2 ranged from 8-11 days) and no marked ({less than or equal to} 2-fold) accumulation in kidney and liver after repeat doses. RGLS4326 was minimally metabolized by nucleases, not cytochrome P450 (P450) isozymes, across species and underwent sequential hydrolysis from both 3' and 5' ends to produce chain-shortened metabolites. There were no human unique metabolites observed. Renal excretion was the major route of elimination of RGLS4326 and a significant fraction (50-79%) of the dose was recovered intact in the urine of mice and monkeys across all dose levels. RGLS4326 is not a substrate, inhibitor, or inducer of P450 isozymes, and it is not a substrate or inhibitor of uptake and most efflux transporters. Thus, RGLS4326 exhibits low potential of mediating drug-drug interactions involving P450 isozymes and drug transporters.

Significance Statement Pharmacokinetics (PK) and absorption, distribution, metabolism, and excretion (ADME) properties of RGLS4326 were characterized in vivo and in vitro. RGLS4326 shows similar PK and ADME properties across mice and monkeys in vivo and across human and animal matrices in vitro. Subcutaneous administration results in preferential exposure of RGLS4326 to the intended target organ (kidney) to drive maximum target engagement. These studies support the interpretation of toxicology and efficacy studies and help characterize the disposition of RGLS4326 in humans.

  • ADME
  • efflux transporters (P-gp, BCRP, MRP, MATE, BSEP, etc)
  • kidney
  • kidney disease
  • kidney/renal
  • miRNA
  • pharmacokinetics
  • plasma protein binding
  • Uptake transporters (OATP, OAT, OCT, PEPT, MCT, NTCP, ASBT, etc.)
  • Copyright © 2023 American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics
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Drug Metabolism and Disposition: 51 (10)
Drug Metabolism and Disposition
Vol. 51, Issue 10
1 Oct 2023
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PK and ADME of anti-miR-17 Oligonucleotide RGLS4326

Amin Kamel, Tate Owen, Izaiah Cole, Tania Valencia and Edmund C Lee
Drug Metabolism and Disposition August 29, 2023, DMD-AR-2023-001446; DOI: https://doi.org/10.1124/dmd.123.001446

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OtherArticle

PK and ADME of anti-miR-17 Oligonucleotide RGLS4326

Amin Kamel, Tate Owen, Izaiah Cole, Tania Valencia and Edmund C Lee
Drug Metabolism and Disposition August 29, 2023, DMD-AR-2023-001446; DOI: https://doi.org/10.1124/dmd.123.001446
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