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Vol. 299, Issue 2, 459-467, November 2001
Graduate School of Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of Tokyo,
Tokyo, Japan (K.S., Y.K., Y.S.); and Meiji Seika Kaisha Ltd.,
Yokohama City, Japan (K.S.)
The alkylglucoside vector has been demonstrated to be a kidney-specific
drug delivery system via cell surface-specific binding sites. In
the present study, we examined the targeting efficiency of this vector
derivatized with several types of ligand to determine the efficacy and
limitations of this system. The tissue uptake clearance in the kidney
(CLuptake, kidney) of alkylglucoside-acylated poly-L-lysine conjugates (Glc-S-C8-APL) with a mol.
wt. of 4,500, 17,000, or 41,000 was greater than that accounted
for by glomerular filtration and was reduced by coadministration of
n-octyl-thioglucoside, which has an affinity for
alkylglycoside binding sites. The mol. wt. distribution, assessed by
gel filtration high-performance liquid chromatography, of the
radioactivity associated with the kidney after intravenous
administration of Glc-S-C8-APL41000 was shifted to a lower mol. wt.
range compared with the authentic compound. The CLuptake,
kidney and specific binding of Glc-S-C8-APL, fractionated based
on mol. wt., to kidney membrane fractions was reduced as the mol. wt.
of the fractionated Glc-S-C8-APL increased. These results suggest that
the target efficiency of this vector depends on the size of the ligand
that it delivers. Both the CLuptake, kidney and specific
binding to kidney membranes of an alkylglucoside-tyrosine conjugate
(Glc-S-C8-Tyr) with an acidic charge was much lower than that of
Glc-S-C8-Tyr with cationic and neutral charges, suggesting that the
anionic moiety could reduce the renal targeting efficiency. Thus, the
targeting efficacy of the alkylglucoside vector seems to depend on, at
least, the size and charge of the ligand that it delivers.