Bisphosphonate Binding Affinity Affects Drug Distribution in Both Intracortical and Trabecular Bone of Rabbits

被引:0
|
作者
John Turek
F. Hal Ebetino
Mark W. Lundy
Shuting Sun
Boris A. Kashemirov
Charles E. McKenna
Maxime A. Gallant
Lilian I. Plotkin
Teresita Bellido
Xuchen Duan
James T. Triffitt
R. Graham G. Russell
David B. Burr
Matthew R. Allen
机构
[1] Purdue University,Department of Basic Medical Sciences
[2] Indiana University School of Medicine,Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology
[3] Warner-Chilcott,Department of Chemistry
[4] University of Southern California,Nuffield Department of Orthopaedics, Rheumatology & Musculoskeletal Sciences, Nuffield Orthopaedic Centre
[5] Oxford University Institute of Musculoskeletal Sciences,undefined
来源
Calcified Tissue International | 2012年 / 90卷
关键词
Anti-remodeling; Skeletal distribution; Drug accumulation; Fluorescent bisphosphonate;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Differences in the binding affinities of bisphosphonates for bone mineral have been proposed to determine their localizations and duration of action within bone. The main objective of this study was to test the hypothesis that mineral binding affinity affects bisphosphonate distribution at the basic multicellular unit (BMU) level within both cortical and cancellous bone. To accomplish this objective, skeletally mature female rabbits (n = 8) were injected simultaneously with both low- and high-affinity bisphosphonate analogs bound to different fluorophores. Skeletal distribution was assessed in the rib, tibia, and vertebra using confocal microscopy. The staining intensity ratio between osteocytes contained within the cement line of newly formed rib osteons or within the reversal line of hemiosteons in vertebral trabeculae compared to osteocytes outside the cement/reversal line was greater for the high-affinity compared to the low-affinity compound. This indicates that the low-affinity compound distributes more equally across the cement/reversal line compared to a high-affinity compound, which concentrates mostly near surfaces. These data, from an animal model that undergoes intracortical remodeling similar to humans, demonstrate that the affinity of bisphosphonates for the bone determines the reach of the drugs in both cortical and cancellous bone.
引用
收藏
页码:202 / 210
页数:8
相关论文
共 22 条
  • [1] Bisphosphonate Binding Affinity Affects Drug Distribution in Both Intracortical and Trabecular Bone of Rabbits
    Turek, John
    Ebetino, F. Hal
    Lundy, Mark W.
    Sun, Shuting
    Kashemirov, Boris A.
    McKenna, Charles E.
    Gallant, Maxime A.
    Plotkin, Lilian I.
    Bellido, Teresita
    Duan, Xuchen
    Triffitt, James T.
    Russell, R. Graham G.
    Burr, David B.
    Allen, Matthew R.
    CALCIFIED TISSUE INTERNATIONAL, 2012, 90 (03) : 202 - 210
  • [2] Low Affinity Bisphosphonate Exerts a Strong Anabolic Effect on Trabecular Bone
    Coffman, Abigail
    Majeska, Robert J.
    Basta-Pljakic, Jelena
    Lundy, Mark W.
    Ebetino, Frank H.
    Schaffler, Mitchell B.
    JOURNAL OF BONE AND MINERAL RESEARCH, 2018, 33 : 34 - 34
  • [3] Bone mineral affinity influences the distribution of a bisphosphonate and a lower affinity analogue in vivo
    Roelofs, A. J.
    Boyde, A.
    Lundy, M. W.
    McKenna, C. E.
    Blazewska, K.
    Sun, S. T.
    Kashemirov, B. A.
    Russell, R. G. G.
    Ebetino, F. H.
    Rogers, M. J.
    Coxon, F. P.
    BONE, 2009, 44 (02) : S430 - S431
  • [4] Bisphosphonate bone affinity, differences predicted by in vitro binding to carbonated apatite
    Henneman, ZJ
    Tang, R
    Gulde, S
    Nancollas, GH
    Phipps, RJ
    Russell, RGG
    Ebetino, FH
    BONE, 2004, 34 : S57 - S58
  • [5] Long-term Suppression of Trabecular Bone Resorption with a Low HA-Binding Affinity Bisphosphonate Reverses Rapidly when Treatment Ceases
    Coffman, Abigial A.
    Guerra, Rosa
    Basta-Pljakic, Jelena
    Majeska, Robert J.
    Schaffler, Mitchell B.
    Ebetino, Frank H.
    Lundy, Mark W.
    JOURNAL OF BONE AND MINERAL RESEARCH, 2019, 34 : 369 - 369
  • [6] Bisphosphonate treatment affects trabecular bone apparent modulus through micro-architecture rather than matrix properties
    Day, JS
    Ding, M
    Bednarz, P
    van der Linden, JC
    Mashiba, T
    Hirano, T
    Johnston, CC
    Burr, DB
    Hvid, I
    Sumner, DR
    Weinans, H
    JOURNAL OF ORTHOPAEDIC RESEARCH, 2004, 22 (03) : 465 - 471
  • [7] The differential distribution in vivo of fluorescently-labeled bisphosphonate analogues with different mineral affinity to bone surfaces
    Boyde, A.
    Lundy, M. W.
    Coxon, F. P.
    McKenna, C. E.
    Roelofs, A.
    Bala, J.
    Rogers, M. J.
    Blazewska, K.
    Russelle, R. G. G.
    Ebetino, F. H.
    BONE, 2009, 44 : S57 - S57
  • [8] A Bisphosphonate With a Low Hydroxyapatite Binding Affinity Prevents Bone Loss in Mice After Ovariectomy and Reverses Rapidly With Treatment Cessation
    Coffman, Abigail A.
    Basta-Pljakic, Jelena
    Guerra, Rosa M.
    Ebetino, Frank H.
    Lundy, Mark W.
    Majeska, Robert J.
    Schaffler, Mitchell B.
    JBMR PLUS, 2021, 5 (04)
  • [9] Relative binding affinity of carboxylate-, phosphonate-, and bisphosphonate-functionalized gold nanoparticles targeted to damaged bone tissue
    Ryan D. Ross
    Lisa E. Cole
    Ryan K. Roeder
    Journal of Nanoparticle Research, 2012, 14
  • [10] Relative binding affinity of carboxylate-, phosphonate-, and bisphosphonate-functionalized gold nanoparticles targeted to damaged bone tissue
    Ross, Ryan D.
    Cole, Lisa E.
    Roeder, Ryan K.
    JOURNAL OF NANOPARTICLE RESEARCH, 2012, 14 (10)