bay-44-4400 and Central-Nervous-System-Diseases

bay-44-4400 has been researched along with Central-Nervous-System-Diseases* in 2 studies

Other Studies

2 other study(ies) available for bay-44-4400 and Central-Nervous-System-Diseases

ArticleYear
Brain penetration of emodepside is increased in P-glycoprotein-deficient mice and leads to neurotoxicosis.
    Journal of veterinary pharmacology and therapeutics, 2015, Volume: 38, Issue:1

    The antiparasitic drug emodepside (EMO) is a substrate of the P-glycoprotein multidrug efflux carrier (P-gp; syn. MDR1, ABCB1), which has an important function in protecting the brain from potentially toxic compounds by functional drug efflux at the blood-brain barrier (BBB). Many dogs of the Collie breed and even dogs of many other breeds have a loss-of-function 4-bp deletion mutation in the MDR1 gene. In these dogs, brain penetration of many P-gp-transported drugs is increased and so their therapeutic usage is restricted. To elucidate the role of P-gp at the BBB for the brain penetration of EMO, we applied EMO at 1 mg/kg to mdr1-deficient (PGP(mut) ) and mdr1-intact (PGP(WT) ) CF1 mice. Whereas in the brain of the PGP(WT) mice, EMO was below the detection level of 10 ng/g, its concentration was at 43.7 ng/g in the PGP(mut) mice. Furthermore, appearance of neurological toxicity was analyzed in these mice after application of 1 mg/kg EMO using a rotarod setup. In all PGP(mut) mice, but not in the PGP(WT) mice, the walking performance on the rotarod was impaired by EMO with clear differences in the degree and duration of neurological toxicity. Some of the mice were completely unable to walk on the rotarod already at 2 h after drug application and showed long-lasting ataxia over >24 h. Others even showed significantly reduced walking performance, but completely recovered within 1 day. In conclusion, P-gp restricts brain penetration of EMO and prevents neurological toxicity of this drug in mice.

    Topics: Animals; Antiparasitic Agents; ATP Binding Cassette Transporter, Subfamily B, Member 1; Blood-Brain Barrier; Central Nervous System Diseases; Depsipeptides; Female; Male; Mice; Mice, Knockout

2015
Identification of a nonsense mutation in feline ABCB1.
    Journal of veterinary pharmacology and therapeutics, 2015, Volume: 38, Issue:5

    The aim of this study was to sequence all exons of the ABCB1 (MDR1) gene in cats that had experienced adverse reactions to P-glycoprotein substrate drugs (phenotyped cats). Eight phenotyped cats were included in the study consisting of eight cats that experienced central nervous system toxicosis after receiving ivermectin (n = 2), a combination product containing moxidectin and imidacloprid (n = 3), a combination product containing praziquantel and emodepside (n = 1) or selamectin (n = 2), and 1 cat that received the product containing praziquantel and emodepside but did not experience toxicity (n = 1). Fifteen exons contained polymorphisms and twelve exons showed no variation from the reference sequence. The most significant finding was a nonsense mutation (ABCB11930_1931del TC) in one of the ivermectin-treated cats. This cat was homozygous for the deletion mutation. All of the other phenotyped cats were homozygous for the wild-type allele. However, 14 missense mutations were identified in one or more phenotyped cats. ABCB11930_1931del TC was also identified in four nonphenotyped cats (one homozygous and three heterozygous for the mutant allele). Cats affected by ABCB11930_1931del TC would be expected to have a similar phenotype as dogs with the previously characterized ABCB1-1Δ mutation.

    Topics: Animals; ATP Binding Cassette Transporter, Subfamily B; Cat Diseases; Cats; Central Nervous System Diseases; Cloning, Molecular; Codon, Nonsense; Depsipeptides; Exons; Homozygote; Imidazoles; Ivermectin; Macrolides; Neonicotinoids; Nitro Compounds; Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide; Praziquantel; Sequence Analysis, DNA

2015