Acceleration of infectious disease drug discovery and development using a humanized model of drug metabolism

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Abstract

A key step in drug discovery, common to many disease areas, is preclinical demonstration of efficacy in a mouse model of disease. However, this demonstration and its translation to the clinic can be impeded by mouse-specific pathways of drug metabolism. Here, we show that a mouse line extensively humanized for the cytochrome P450 gene superfamily (“8HUM”) can circumvent these problems. The pharmacokinetics, metabolite profiles, and magnitude of drug-drug interactions of a test set of approved medicines were in much closer alignment with clinical observations than in wild-type mice. Infection with Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Leishmania donovani, and Trypanosoma cruzi was well tolerated in 8HUM, permitting efficacy assessment. During such assessments, mouse-specific metabolic liabilities were bypassed while the impact of clinically relevant active metabolites and DDI on efficacy were well captured. Removal of species differences in metabolism by replacement of wild-type mice with 8HUM therefore reduces compound attrition while improving clinical translation, accelerating drug discovery.

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Kenneth MacLeod, A., Coquelin, K. S., Huertas, L., Simeons, F. R. C., Riley, J., Casado, P., … Read, K. D. (2024). Acceleration of infectious disease drug discovery and development using a humanized model of drug metabolism. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 121(7). https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2315069121

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