Tanya Watanabe
Isis Pharmaceuticals
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Drug Metabolism and Disposition | 2006
Rosie Z. Yu; Tae-Won Kim; An Hong; Tanya Watanabe; Hans J. Gaus; Richard S. Geary
The pharmacokinetics of a 2′-O-(2-methoxyethyl)-modified oligonucleotide, ISIS 301012 [targeting human apolipoprotein B-100 (apoB-100)], was characterized in mouse, rat, monkey, and human. Plasma pharmacokinetics following parental administration was similar across species, exhibiting a rapid distribution phase with t1/2α of several hours and a prolonged elimination phase with t1/2β of days. The prolonged elimination phase represents equilibrium between tissues and circulating drug due to slow elimination from tissues. Absorption was nearly complete following s.c. injection, with bioavailability ranging from 80 to 100% in monkeys. Plasma clearance scaled well across species as a function of body weight alone, and this correlation was improved when corrected for plasma protein binding. In all of the animal models studied, the highest tissue concentrations of ISIS 301012 were observed in kidney and liver. Urinary excretion was less than 3% in monkeys and human in the first 24 h. ISIS 301012 is highly bound to plasma proteins, probably preventing rapid removal by renal filtration. However, following 25 mg/kg s.c. administration in mouse and 5-mg/kg i.v. bolus administration in rat, plasma concentrations of ISIS 301012 exceeded their respective protein binding capacity. Thus, urinary excretion increased to 16% or greater within the first 24 h. Albeit slow, urinary excretion of ISIS 301012 and its shortened metabolites is the ultimate elimination pathway of this compound, as demonstrated by 32% of dose recovered in total excreta by 14 days in a rat mass balance study. The pharmacokinetics of ISIS 301012 in human is predictable from the pharmacokinetics measured in animals. The pharmacokinetic properties of ISIS 301012 provide guidance for clinical development and support infrequent dose administration.
Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences | 2001
Rosie Z. Yu; Richard S. Geary; Janet M. Leeds; Tanya Watanabe; Max N. Moore; Jon Fitchett; John Matson; Todd Burckin; Michael V. Templin; Arthur A. Levin
The plasma pharmacokinetics and tissue disposition of ISIS 2503 were studied in mice following single and multiple bolus intravenous (iv) injections of 1-50 mg/kg, and in monkeys following single and multiple 2-h iv infusions of 1-10 mg/kg and bolus iv injections of 1 mg/kg of ISIS 2503. ISIS 2503 and its metabolites were measured in plasma, urine, and tissues using solid-phase extraction followed by capillary gel electrophoresis (CGE). In both species, the plasma clearance of ISIS 2503 was characterized by rapid distribution to tissues, and to a lesser extent, metabolism. The plasma clearance in mice was at least two-fold more rapid than in monkeys at equivalent doses. The plasma disposition (t1/2) increased with dose. The highest concentrations of oligonucleotide were consistently observed in the kidney and liver in both species. At equivalent doses, tissue concentrations in monkeys were much higher than tissue concentrations in mice. Urinary excretion of total oligonucleotide was a minor elimination pathway in both species at doses < 10 mg/kg. However, urinary excretion of total oligonucleotide in mice was increased to 12-29% as dose increased from 20 to 50 mg/kg.
Pharmaceutical Research | 1999
Rosie Z. Yu; Richard S. Geary; Janet M. Leeds; Tanya Watanabe; Jonathon R. Fitchett; John Matson; Rahul Mehta; Gregory R. Hardee; Michael V. Templin; Ken Huang; Mary S. Newman; Yoli Quinn; Paul S. Uster; George Z. Zhu; Michelle J. Horner; Joyce Nelson; Arthur A. Levin
AbstractPurpose. This study examined the pharmacokinetics and tissue distribution of an antisense oligonucleotide ISIS 2503, formulated in stealth (pegylated) liposomes (encapsulated) or in phosphate-buffered saline (unencapsulated). Methods. Encapsulated or unencapsulated ISIS 2503 was administered to rhesus monkeys by intravenous infusion. The concentrations of ISIS 2503 and metabolites in blood, plasma, and tissue samples were determined by capillary gel electrophoresis. Results. Plasma concentrations of encapsulated ISIS 2503 decreased mono-exponentially after infusion with a mean half-life of 57.8 hours. In contrast, the concentration of unencapsulated ISIS 2503 in plasma decreased rapidly with a mean half-life of 1.07 hours. Both encapsulated and unencapsulated ISIS 2503 distributed widely into tissues. Encapsulated ISIS 2503 distributed primarily to the reticulo-endothelial system and there were few metabolites observed. In contrast, unencapsulated ISIS 2503 distributed rapidly to tissue with highest concentration seen in kidney and liver. Nuclease-mediated metabolism was extensive for unencapsulated oligonucleotide in plasma and tissues. Conclusions. The data suggest that stealth liposomes protect ISIS 2503 from nucleases in blood and tissues, slow tissue uptake, and slow the rate of clearance from the systemic circulation. These attributes may make these formulations attractive for delivering oligonucleotides to sites with increased vasculature permeability such as tumors or sites of inflammation.
Clinical Pharmacokinectics | 2006
Richard S. Geary; Joann D. Bradley; Tanya Watanabe; Younggil Kwon; Mark K. Wedel; Jan Jaap van Lier; Andre van Vliet
BackgroundISIS 113715 is a 20-mer phosphorothioate antisense oligonucleotide (ASO) that is complementary to the protein tyrosine phosphatase 1B (PTP-1B) messenger RNA and subsequently reduces translation of the PTP-1B protein, a negative regulator of insulin receptor. ISIS 113715 is currently being studied in early phase II clinical studies to determine its ability to improve or restore insulin receptor sensitivity in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus. Future work will investigate the combination of ISIS 113715 with antidiabetic compounds.MethodsIn vitro ultrafiltration human plasma protein binding displacement studies and a phase I clinical study were used to characterise the potential for pharmacokinetic interaction of ISIS 113715 and three marketed oral antidiabetic agents. ISIS 113715 was co-incubated with glipizide and rosiglitazone in whole human plasma and tested for increased free drug concentrations. In a phase I clinical study, 23 healthy volunteers received a single oral dose of an antidiabetic compound (either metformin, glipizide or rosiglitazone) both alone and together with subcutaneous ISIS 113715 200mg in a sequential crossover design. A comparative pharmacokinetic analysis was performed to determine if there were any effects that resulted from coadministration of ISIS 113715 with these antidiabetic compounds.ResultsIn vitro human plasma protein binding displacement studies showed only minor effects on rosiglitazone and no effect on glipizide when co-incubated with ISIS 113715. The results of the phase I clinical study further indicate that there were no measurable changes in glipizide (5mg), metformin (500mg) or rosiglitazone (2mg) exposure parameters, maximum plasma concentration and the area under the concentration-time curve, or pharmacokinetic parameter, elimination half-life when coadministered with ISIS 113715. Furthermore, there was no effect of ISIS 113715, administered in combination with metformin, on the urinary excretion of metformin. Conversely, there were no observed alterations in ISIS 113715 pharmacokinetics when administered in combination with any of the oral antidiabetic compounds.ConclusionThese data provide evidence that ISIS 113715 exhibits no clinically relevant pharmacokinetic interactions on the disposition and clearance of the oral antidiabetic drugs. The results of these studies support further study of ISIS 113715 in combination with antidiabetic compounds.
Molecular therapy. Nucleic acids | 2017
Colby S. Shemesh; Rosie Z. Yu; Mark S. Warren; Michael Liu; Mirza Jahic; Brandon Nichols; Noah Post; Song Lin; Daniel Norris; Eunju Hurh; Jane Huang; Tanya Watanabe; Scott P. Henry; Yanfeng Wang
Antisense oligonucleotides are metabolized by nucleases and drug interactions with small drug molecules at either the cytochrome P450 (CYP) enzyme or transporter levels have not been observed to date. Herein, a comprehensive in vitro assessment of the drug-drug interaction (DDI) potential was carried out with four 2′-O-(2-methoxyethyl)-modified antisense oligonucleotides (2′-MOE-ASOs), including a single triantennary N-acetyl galactosamine (GalNAc3)-conjugated ASO. Several investigations to describe the DDI potential of a 2′-MOE-ASO conjugated to a high-affinity ligand for hepatocyte-specific asialoglycoprotein receptors are explored. The inhibition on CYP1A2, CYP2B6, CYP2C8, CYP2C9, CYP2C19, CYP2D6, CYP2E1, and CYP3A4 and induction on CYP1A2, CYP2B6, and CYP3A4 were investigated in cryopreserved hepatocytes using up to 100 μM of each ASO. No significant inhibition (half maximal inhibitory concentration [IC50] > 100 μM) or induction was observed based on either enzymatic phenotype or mRNA levels. In addition, transporter interaction studies were conducted with nine major transporters per recommendations from regulatory guidances and included three hepatic uptake transporters, organic cation transporter 1 (OCT1), organic anion transporting polypeptide 1B1 (OATP1B1), and OATP1B3; three renal uptake transporters, organic anion transporter 1 (OAT1), OAT3, and OCT2; and three efflux transporters, P-glycoprotein (P-gp), breast cancer resistance protein (BCRP), and bile salt export pump (BSEP). None of the four ASOs (10 μM) were substrates of any of the nine transporters, with uptake <2-fold compared to controls, and efflux ratios were below 2.0 for BCRP and P-gp. Additionally, neither of the four ASOs showed meaningful inhibition on any of the nine transporters tested, with the mean percent inhibition ranging from −38.3% to 24.2% with 100 μM ASO. Based on these findings, the unconjugated and GalNAc3-conjugated 2′-MOE-ASOs would have no or minimal DDI with small drug molecules via any major CYP enzyme or drug transporters at clinically relevant exposures.
Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | 2001
Richard S. Geary; Tanya Watanabe; Loanne Truong; Sue Freier; Elena A. Lesnik; Namir Sioufi; Henri Sasmor; Muthiah Manoharan; Arthur A. Levin
Drug Metabolism and Disposition | 2003
Richard S. Geary; Rosie Z. Yu; Tanya Watanabe; Scott P. Henry; Greg Hardee; Alfred Chappell; John Matson; Henri Sasmor; Len Cummins; Arthur A. Levin
Clinical Cancer Research | 2003
Alex A. Adjei; Grace K. Dy; Charles Erlichman; Joel M. Reid; Jeff A. Sloan; Henry C. Pitot; Steven R. Alberts; Richard M. Goldberg; Lorelei J. Hanson; Pamela J. Atherton; Tanya Watanabe; Richard S. Geary; Jon T. Holmlund; F. Andrew Dorr
Oligonucleotides | 2006
Tanya Watanabe; Richard S. Geary; Arthur A. Levin
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2005
Klaus Albertshofer; Andrew M. Siwkowski; Edward Wancewicz; Christine Esau; Tanya Watanabe; Kenji C. Nishihara; Garth A. Kinberger; Leila Malik; Anne B. Eldrup; Muthiah Manoharan; Richard S. Geary; Brett P. Monia; Eric E. Swayze; Richard H. Griffey; and C. Frank Bennett; Martin Maier