Cellular impedance assays for predictive preclinical drug screening of kinase inhibitor cardiovascular toxicity.

Lamore SD, Kamendi HW, Scott CW, Dragan YP, Peters MF.
Journal   Toxicol Sci.
Species  
Analytes Measured   Troponin T cardiac
Matrix Tested   Cell culture supernatants
Year   2013
Volume  
Page Numbers  
Application   Toxicology
Abstract
Cardiovascular (CV) toxicity is a leading contributor to drug attrition. Implementing earlier testing has successfully reduced hERG-related arrhythmias. However, analogous assays targeting functional CV effects remain elusive. Demand to address this gap is particularly acute for kinase inhibitors (KI) which suffer frequent CV toxicity. The drug class also presents some particularly challenging requirements for assessing functional CV toxicity. Specifically, an assay must sense a downstream response that integrates diverse kinase signaling pathways. In addition, sufficient throughput is essential for handling inherent KI nonselectivity. A new opportunity has emerged with cellular impedance technology which detects spontaneous beating cardiomyocytes. Impedance assays sense morphology changes downstream of cardiomyocyte contraction. To evaluate cardiomyocyte impedance assays for KI screening, we investigated two distinct KI classes where CV toxicity was discovered late and target risks remain unresolved. Microtubule-associated protein/microtubule affinity-regulating kinase (MARK) inhibitors decrease blood pressure in dogs while checkpoint kinase (Chk) inhibitors (AZD7762, SCH900776) exhibit dose-limiting CV toxicities in clinical trials. These in vivo effects manifested in vitro as cardiomyocyte beat cessation. MARK effects were deemed mechanism-associated since beat inhibition potencies correlated with kinase inhibition, and gene knockdown and microtubule-targeting agents suppressed beating. MARK inhibitor impedance and kinase potencies aligned with rat blood pressure effects. Chk inhibitor effects were judged off-target since Chk and beat inhibition potencies did not correlate and knockdowns did not alter beating. Taken together, the data demonstrate that cardiomyocyte impedance assays can address three unmet needs- detecting KI functional cardiotoxicity in vitro, determining mechanism of action, and supporting safety structure-activity relationships.

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