Comparative Physiology of Mice and Rats: Radiometric Measurement of Vascular Parameters in Rodent Tissues
Autor: | Eduardo E. Mundo, Sheila Ulufatu, Marjie Van Hoy, Leslie A. Khawli, Michelle G. Schweiger, Nicholas Majidy, Hendry S. Cahaya, Daniela Bumbaca, Paul J. Fielder, C. Andrew Boswell, Saileta Prabhu |
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Rok vydání: | 2014 |
Předmět: |
Pathology
medicine.medical_specialty Blood Volume Rodent Comparative physiology Body Weight Pharmaceutical Science Blood flow Models Theoretical Biology Rats Rats Sprague-Dawley Mice Red blood cell medicine.anatomical_structure Bolus (medicine) Interstitial volume biology.animal Drug Discovery Drug delivery Extracellular medicine Animals Molecular Medicine Female |
Zdroj: | Molecular Pharmaceutics. 11:1591-1598 |
ISSN: | 1543-8392 1543-8384 |
DOI: | 10.1021/mp400748t |
Popis: | A solid understanding of physiology is beneficial in optimizing drug delivery and in the development of clinically predictive models of drug disposition kinetics. Although an abundance of data exists in the literature, it is often confounded by the use of various experimental methods and a lack of consensus in values from different sources. To help address this deficiency, we sought to directly compare three important vascular parameters at the tissue level using the same experimental approach in both mice and rats. Interstitial volume, vascular volume, and blood flow were radiometrically measured in selected harvested tissues of both species by extracellular marker infusion, red blood cell labeling, and rubidium chloride bolus distribution, respectively. The latter two parameters were further compared by whole-body autoradiographic imaging. An overall good interspecies agreement was observed for interstitial volume and blood flow on a weight-normalized basis in most tissues. In contrast, the measured vascular volumes of most rat tissues were higher than for mouse. Mice and rats, the two most commonly utilized rodent species in translational drug development, should not be considered as interchangeable in terms of vascular volume per gram of tissue. This will be particularly critical in biodistribution studies of drugs, as the amount of drug in the residual blood of tissues is often not negligible, especially for biologic drugs (e.g., antibodies) having long circulation half-lives. Physiologically based models of drug pharmacokinetics and/or pharmacodynamics also rely on accurate knowledge of biological parameters in tissues. For tissue parameters with poor interspecies agreement, the significance and possible drivers are discussed. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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