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1.
Ann Neurol ; 75(4): 550-62, 2014 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24615913

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: There is considerable interest in using bumetanide, a chloride importer Na-K-Cl cotransporter antagonist, for treatment of neurological diseases, such as epilepsy or ischemic and traumatic brain injury, that may involve deranged cellular chloride homeostasis. However, bumetanide is heavily bound to plasma proteins (~98%) and highly ionized at physiological pH, so that it only poorly penetrates into the brain, and chronic treatment with bumetanide is compromised by its potent diuretic effect. METHODS: To overcome these problems, we designed lipophilic and uncharged prodrugs of bumetanide that should penetrate the blood-brain barrier more easily than the parent drug and are converted into bumetanide in the brain. The feasibility of this strategy was evaluated in mice and rats. RESULTS: Analysis of bumetanide levels in plasma and brain showed that administration of 2 ester prodrugs of bumetanide, the pivaloyloxymethyl (BUM1) and N,N-dimethylaminoethylester (BUM5), resulted in significantly higher brain levels of bumetanide than administration of the parent drug. BUM5, but not BUM1, was less diuretic than bumetanide, so that BUM5 was further evaluated in chronic models of epilepsy in mice and rats. In the pilocarpine model in mice, BUM5, but not bumetanide, counteracted the alteration in seizure threshold during the latent period. In the kindling model in rats, BUM5 was more efficacious than bumetanide in potentiating the anticonvulsant effect of phenobarbital. INTERPRETATION: Our data demonstrate that the goal of designing bumetanide prodrugs that specifically target the brain is feasible and that such drugs may resolve the problems associated with using bumetanide for treatment of neurological disorders.


Subject(s)
Brain/drug effects , Bumetanide/therapeutic use , Epilepsy/drug therapy , Serum/drug effects , Sodium Potassium Chloride Symporter Inhibitors/therapeutic use , Action Potentials/drug effects , Animals , Animals, Newborn , Brain/cytology , Brain/metabolism , Bumetanide/chemistry , Bumetanide/pharmacology , Convulsants/toxicity , Disease Models, Animal , Diuretics/pharmacology , Dogs , Dose-Response Relationship, Drug , Drug Evaluation, Preclinical , Epilepsy/chemically induced , Humans , In Vitro Techniques , Mice , Neurons/drug effects , Pentylenetetrazole/toxicity , Phenobarbital/therapeutic use , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Rats, Wistar , Sodium Potassium Chloride Symporter Inhibitors/chemistry , Sodium Potassium Chloride Symporter Inhibitors/pharmacology , Species Specificity , Time Factors
2.
Eur J Neurosci ; 39(4): 673-87, 2014 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24251546

ABSTRACT

The diuretic bumetanide, which acts by blocking the Na-K-Cl cotransporter (NKCC), is widely used to inhibit neuronal NKCC1, particularly when NKCC1 expression is abnormally increased in brain diseases such as epilepsy. However, bumetanide poorly penetrates into the brain and, in rodents, is rapidly eliminated because of extensive oxidation of its N-butyl sidechain, reducing the translational value of rodent experiments. Inhibition of oxidation by piperonyl butoxide (PBO) has previously been reported to increase the half-life and diuretic activity of bumetanide in rats. Here we studied whether inhibition of bumetanide metabolism by PBO also increases brain levels of bumetanide in rats, and whether this alters pharmacodynamic effects in the kindling model of epilepsy. Furthermore, we studied the effects of PBO in mice. Mice eliminated bumetanide less rapidly than rats (elimination half-life 47 min vs. 13 min). Pretreatment with PBO increased the half-life in mice to average values (70 min) previously determined in humans, and markedly elevated brain levels of bumetanide. In rats, the increase in plasma and brain levels of bumetanide by PBO was less marked than in mice. PBO significantly increased the diuretic activity of bumetanide in rats and, less effectively, in mice. In epileptic mice, bumetanide (with PBO) did not suppress spontaneous seizures. In the rat kindling model, bumetanide (with or without PBO) did not exert anticonvulsant effects on fully kindled seizures, but dose-dependently altered kindling development. These data indicate that PBO offers a simple means to enhance the translational properties of rodent experiments with bumetanide, particularly when using mice.


Subject(s)
Brain/drug effects , Bumetanide/therapeutic use , Diuretics/therapeutic use , Sodium Potassium Chloride Symporter Inhibitors/therapeutic use , Status Epilepticus/drug therapy , Animals , Antioxidants/pharmacology , Antioxidants/therapeutic use , Brain/physiopathology , Bumetanide/pharmacokinetics , Bumetanide/pharmacology , Diuretics/pharmacokinetics , Diuretics/pharmacology , Kainic Acid/toxicity , Mice , Piperonyl Butoxide/pharmacology , Piperonyl Butoxide/therapeutic use , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Rats, Wistar , Sodium Potassium Chloride Symporter Inhibitors/pharmacokinetics , Sodium Potassium Chloride Symporter Inhibitors/pharmacology , Status Epilepticus/chemically induced
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