Therapeutic α-1-microglobulin ameliorates kidney ischemia-reperfusion injury.
Mikhail BurmakinPeter S GilmourMagnus GramNelli ShushakovaRuben M SandovalBruce A MolitorisTobias E LarssonPublished in: American journal of physiology. Renal physiology (2024)
α-1-Microglobulin (A1M) is a circulating glycoprotein with antioxidant, heme-binding, and mitochondrial protection properties. The investigational drug RMC-035, a modified therapeutic A1M protein, was assessed for biodistribution and pharmacological activity in a broad set of in vitro and in vivo experiments, supporting its clinical development. Efficacy and treatment posology were assessed in various models of kidney ischemia and reperfusion injury (IRI). Real-time glomerular filtration rate (GFR), functional renal biomarkers, tubular injury biomarkers (NGAL and KIM-1), and histopathology were evaluated. Fluorescently labeled RMC-035 was used to assess biodistribution. RMC-035 demonstrated consistent and reproducible kidney protection in rat IRI models as well as in a model of IRI imposed on renal impairment and in a mouse IRI model, where it reduced mortality. Its pharmacological activity was most pronounced with combined dosing pre- and post-ischemia and weaker with either pre- or post-ischemia dosing alone. RMC-035 rapidly distributed to the kidneys via glomerular filtration and selective luminal uptake by proximal tubular cells. IRI-induced expression of kidney heme oxygenase-1 was inhibited by RMC-035, consistent with its antioxidative properties. RMC-035 also dampened IRI-associated inflammation and improved mitochondrial function, as shown by tubular autofluorescence. Taken together, the efficacy of RMC-035 is congruent with its targeted mechanism(s) and biodistribution profile, supporting its further clinical evaluation as a novel kidney-protective therapy. NEW & NOTEWORTHY A therapeutic A1M protein variant (RMC-035) is currently in phase 2 clinical development for renal protection in patients undergoing open-chest cardiac surgery. It targets several key pathways underlying kidney injury in this patient group, including oxidative stress, heme toxicity, and mitochondrial dysfunction. RMC-035 is rapidly eliminated from plasma, distributing to kidney proximal tubules, and demonstrates dose-dependent efficacy in numerous models of ischemia-reperfusion injury, particularly when administered before ischemia. These results support its continued clinical evaluation.
Keyphrases
- oxidative stress
- ischemia reperfusion injury
- clinical evaluation
- diabetic rats
- induced apoptosis
- high glucose
- cardiac surgery
- patients undergoing
- dna damage
- pet imaging
- binding protein
- acute kidney injury
- cardiovascular disease
- endothelial cells
- stem cells
- coronary artery disease
- randomized controlled trial
- drug delivery
- mesenchymal stem cells
- cell proliferation
- mouse model
- acute myocardial infarction
- amino acid
- computed tomography
- anti inflammatory
- study protocol
- brain injury
- type diabetes
- drug induced
- signaling pathway
- cardiovascular events
- phase iii
- electronic health record
- atrial fibrillation
- protein protein