Inhibition of sodium/hydrogen exchanger 3 in the gastrointestinal tract by tenapanor reduces paracellular phosphate permeability.
Andrew J KingMatthew SiegelYing HeBaoming NieJi WangSamantha Koo-McCoyNatali A MinassianQumber JafriDeng PanJill KohlerPadmapriya KumaraswamyKenji KozukaJason G LewisDean DragoliDavid P RosenbaumDebbie O'NeillAllein PlainPeter J GreasleyAnn-Cathrine Jönsson-RylanderDaniel KarlssonMargareta BehrendtMaria StrömstedtTina Ryden-BergstenThomas KnöpfelEva M Pastor ArroyoNati HernandoJoanne MarksMark DonowitzCarsten Alexander WagnerRobert Todd AlexanderJeremy S CaldwellPublished in: Science translational medicine (2019)
Hyperphosphatemia is common in patients with chronic kidney disease and is increasingly associated with poor clinical outcomes. Current management of hyperphosphatemia with dietary restriction and oral phosphate binders often proves inadequate. Tenapanor, a minimally absorbed, small-molecule inhibitor of the sodium/hydrogen exchanger isoform 3 (NHE3), acts locally in the gastrointestinal tract to inhibit sodium absorption. Because tenapanor also reduces intestinal phosphate absorption, it may have potential as a therapy for hyperphosphatemia. We investigated the mechanism by which tenapanor reduces gastrointestinal phosphate uptake, using in vivo studies in rodents and translational experiments on human small intestinal stem cell-derived enteroid monolayers to model ion transport physiology. We found that tenapanor produces its effect by modulating tight junctions, which increases transepithelial electrical resistance (TEER) and reduces permeability to phosphate, reducing paracellular phosphate absorption. NHE3-deficient monolayers mimicked the phosphate phenotype of tenapanor treatment, and tenapanor did not affect TEER or phosphate flux in the absence of NHE3. Tenapanor also prevents active transcellular phosphate absorption compensation by decreasing the expression of NaPi2b, the major active intestinal phosphate transporter. In healthy human volunteers, tenapanor (15 mg, given twice daily for 4 days) increased stool phosphorus and decreased urinary phosphorus excretion. We determined that tenapanor reduces intestinal phosphate absorption predominantly through reduction of passive paracellular phosphate flux, an effect mediated exclusively via on-target NHE3 inhibition.