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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, July 2006, p. 2471-2477, Vol. 50, No. 7
0066-4804/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AAC.00138-06
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Yuao Zhu, and
Michael D. Miller
Gilead Sciences, Inc., 333 Lakeside Dr., Foster City, California 94404
Received 2 February 2006/ Returned for modification 15 March 2006/ Accepted 25 April 2006
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[3]). Tenofovir has selective activity against retroviruses and hepadnaviruses and is currently approved for the treatment of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) as the bis-alkoxyester prodrug tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (tenofovir DF). Tenofovir DF is orally bioavailable, and the promoieties are cleaved during adsorption to release tenofovir into systemic circulation (reviewed by Kearney et al. [11]). With respect to hepadnaviruses, tenofovir was shown to be active against duck and human hepatitis B viruses (HBV) in vitro (7) and more recently against woodchuck hepatitis virus in vivo (15). Clinically, 48 weeks of tenofovir DF treatment in HIV/HBV-coinfected patients has resulted in serum HBV DNA reductions of 4.7 to 5.5 log10 copies/ml in patients with either wild-type or lamivudine-resistant HBV infection (5, 28). The clinical activity seen against lamivudine-resistant viruses is consistent with in vitro studies which have demonstrated that tenofovir is active against all major patterns of lamivudine resistance mutations (35). There are now three oral antiviral agents approved to treat chronic hepatitis B: the nucleotide adefovir dipivoxil (ADV) and the nucleosides lamivudine and entecavir. While each of these agents produces multilog suppression of serum HBV DNA, they induce only modest rates of HBV surface antigen seroconversion and thus require long-term administration to control disease in most patients. The need for long-term therapy necessitates drug safety and the ability to delay or manage the emergence of resistant HBV strains. While lamivudine is a well-tolerated drug, resistance emerges in approximately 20% of patients per year of monotherapy (13). In contrast, long-term studies with ADV and more limited experience with entecavir indicate that the selection of drug resistance is considerably slower with these agents. ADV retains clinical efficacy against lamivudine-resistant mutants (17, 18) but selects the mutation rtN236T and, less frequently, rtA181V (14). Entecavir shows reduced susceptibility to lamivudine-resistant mutants in vitro and clinically and an accelerated development of entecavir resistance mutations (rtI169T, rtT184S/G, rtS202I, and rtM250V) in lamivudine-resistant patients (27, 35). Since resistance leads to loss of virologic suppression and the resumption of liver disease, new agents and treatment modalities will be necessary to adequately treat patients as new mutations emerge.
On a molar basis, the in vitro antiviral activity of tenofovir is similar to adefovir. However, tenofovir DF is used clinically at higher doses (300 mg) without the reversible nephrotoxicity observed using high doses of ADV (30 mg or greater) (8-10). Preliminary clinical data suggest that 300 mg of tenofovir DF results in a significantly greater serum HBV DNA suppression than the approved 10-mg dose of ADV (28). Based on long-term safety data and initial efficacy data in patients with wild-type or lamivudine-resistant HBV infection, tenofovir DF is undergoing clinical development for the treatment of chronic hepatitis B. We therefore profiled the in vitro properties of tenofovir which are relevant for the treatment of HBV infection. Specifically, we sought to (i) confirm the antiviral mechanism of action of tenofovir and its prodrug against HBV, (ii) evaluate the activity of tenofovir against additional clinically relevant drug resistance mutations, and (iii) investigate the intracellular metabolism of tenofovir to its active diphosphate species in hepatic cells.
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Compounds. Tenofovir, tenofovir diphosphate (TFV-DP), tenofovir DF, adefovir, adefovir diphosphate (AFV-DP), and ADV were synthesized by Gilead Sciences (Foster City, CA). Lamivudine was obtained from Moravek Biochemicals (Brea, CA).
HBV polymerase assays.
The generation and purification of active HBV polymerase using recombinant baculovirus has been described previously (33, 34). HBV DNA polymerase activity was measured by incorporation of
-33P-labeled dATP into acid-precipitatible products using activated calf thymus DNA as a template as described previously (33, 34). Inhibition constants (Ki) were determined by fitting initial rates to Lineweaver-Burk plots based on the competitive inhibition equation 1/V = 1/Vmax + Km/Vmax(1 + [I]/Ki) (1/S).
2.2.15 antiviral assays. 2.2.15 cells were seeded in 48-well plates and treated with freshly prepared medium containing compound every 2 days for a 2-week period. Seven doses of each compound were used at concentrations ranging from 0.001 µM to 10 µM in half-log increments. Following the treatment period, cells were lysed by the addition of 200 µl phosphate-buffered saline containing 0.5% NP-40 (Sigma, St. Louis, MO) per well. Lysates were transferred to microcentrifuge tubes and centrifuged for 10 min at maximum speed to pellet nuclei. Supernatants were transferred to clean tubes, and cytoplasmic DNA was extracted using QiaAmp DNA blood mini extraction kits (QIAGEN, Valencia, CA). Purified DNA was transferred to nylon membranes using a slot blot manifold as described previously (12). Viral DNA was detected by nucleic acid hybridization using a 33P-labeled HBV probe and quantified using a Storm 860 PhosphorImager (Molecular Dynamics, Sunnyvale, CA). Data were fit to the logistic dose-response equation y = a/[1+(x/b)c], and 50% effective concentration (EC50) values were calculated from the resulting equations as described previously (4).
Generation and cloning of HBV encoding drug resistance mutations. The plasmid pFBHBV-wt encodes a terminally redundant (1.3 unit-length), replication-competent HBV genome (genotype A; GenBank accession number AF305422) in the pFastBacDual vector backbone (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA). The rtA194T, rtL180M, and rtM204V mutations were introduced by site-directed mutagenesis using the following primers: rtA194T, 5'-TCA GTG GTT CGT AGG ACT TTC CCC CAC TGT TTG-3'; rtL180M, 5'-AGT CCG TTT CTC ATG GCT CAG TTT ACT-3'; rtM204V, 5'-GCT TTC AGC TAT GTG GAT GAT GTG GTA-3' (bolded sequence indicates the mutated codon). The reverse transcriptase domains of all constructs were sequenced to confirm that no additional mutations had been introduced. Patient baseline and rtN236T-containing viruses were cloned by full-length PCR amplification as described by Gunther et al. (6), followed by SapI digestion and ligation into the HBV expression vector pHY106 as previously described (36).
Transient antiviral assays. HepG2 cells were seeded into six-well culture dishes at a density of 1 x 106 cells/dish. Sixteen hours postseeding, cells were transfected with 5 µg of plasmid DNA encoding the HBV genome of interest using the Fugene 6 transfection reagent (Roche, Indianapolis, IN). The following day, cells were fed fresh medium containing compound. Cells were treated for 1 week, after which intracellular HBV replicative intermediates were isolated as previously described (4). Viral DNA was fractionated on 1% agarose gels and transferred to nylon membranes (Roche) using standard Southern blotting procedures (25). Viral DNA was quantified, and EC50 values were calculated as described above.
Analysis of intracellular tenofovir metabolites. HepG2 cells were seeded in 12-well tissue culture plates and grown to confluence (average of 8.8 x 105 cells/well). Fresh primary hepatocytes were purchased in 12-well tissue culture plates. Uptake and phosphorylation experiments were initiated by the addition of 10 µM tenofovir to cell culture medium. At time points of 2, 6, and 24 h, drug-containing medium was aspirated and cells were washed two times with 2.5 ml ice-cold phosphate-buffered saline. Cells were then scraped into 500 µl 70% methanol and stored at 20°C to facilitate the extraction of metabolites. Cellular debris was removed by centrifugation for 10 min at 15,000 rpm in a microcentrifuge, and supernatants were dried by speed vacuum. Samples were resuspended in 10 µl tetrabutyl ammonium acetate containing 2 picomole of [5-(6-amino-purin-9-yl)-2,5-dihydro-furan-2-yloxymethyl] phosphonic acid diphosphate (as an internal standard) per 200,000 cells. Transient ion-pairing high-performance liquid chromatography coupled to positive ion electrospray tandem mass spectrometery (LC/MS/MS) was used to analyze tenofovir and its phosphorylated metabolites. Comparative experiments performed with adefovir were conducted as described above using 10 µM adefovir as the concentration for cell incubation. Details of the LC/MS/MS conditions have recently been published (22).
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FIG. 1. Competitive inhibition of HBV polymerase by TFV-DP. HBV polymerase was incubated with template (activated calf thymus DNA) deoxynucleoside triphosphates and -33P-labeled dATP. Inhibition of labeled dATP incorporation was measured in the presence of the indicated concentrations of TFV-DP. Data are presented as a Lineweaver-Burk plot.
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TABLE 1. Anti-HBV activities of tenofovir and related compounds in HepG2 2.2.15 cells
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TABLE 2. In vitro activities of tenofovir, adefovir, and lamivudine against HBV, isolated from two patients, encoding the adefovir resistance mutation rtN236T
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TABLE 3. In vitro susceptibilities of wild-type, rtA194T, rtL180M+rtM204V, and rtA194T+rtL180M+rtM204V HBV to tenofovir in a transient-cell-based antiviral assay
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FIG. 2. Phosphorylation kinetics of tenofovir to mono- and diphosphate species in HepG2 cells and primary human hepatocytes. Primary human hepatocytes (A) and HepG2 cells (B) were treated with 10 µM tenofovir. At the indicated time points, cells were washed and lysed and the amounts of intracellular tenofovir, TFV-MP, and TFV-DP were quantified by LC/MS/MS. Parallel experiments were performed with 10 µM adefovir in primary hepatocytes (C) and HepG2 cells (D) to determine levels of adefovir, AFV-MP, and AFV-DP.
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TFV-DP has a long half-life in hepatic cells. To determine the half-life of TFV-DP in hepatic cells, we incubated primary human hepatocytes in 10 µM tenofovir for 24 h and then measured TFV-DP concentrations over a 4-day period following drug removal (Fig. 3A). Consistent with the previous experiment, approximately 7 µM TFV-DP was formed after a 24-h incubation with tenofovir. TFV-DP remained detectable throughout the 4-day period after drug withdrawal, and a half-life of 95 ± 6 h was calculated using a single exponential decay model. We also determined the half-life of AFV-DP in parallel (Fig. 3B). Following a 24-h incubation with adefovir, 3.2 µM AFV-DP was formed and the diphosphate had an intracellular half-life of 75 ± 1 h.
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FIG. 3. Intracellular half-life of TFV-DP in primary human hepatocytes. Primary human hepatocytes were incubated with 10 µM tenofovir (A) or 10 µM adefovir (B) for 24 h to accumulate diphosphate. Cells were then washed, fed fresh medium without drug, and then lysed at the indicated times for quantification of intracellular diphosphate levels by LC/MS/MS. Using a single exponential decay model, intracellular diphosphate half-lives of 95 ± 6 and 75 ± 1 h were calculated for tenofovir and adefovir, respectively.
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Our enzymatic studies confirmed tenofovir inhibits HBV replication through competitive inhibition of the viral polymerase. The Ki of TFV-DP for HBV polymerase (0.18 µM) is similar to that of AFV-DP (0.10 µM) and slightly lower than the Km of the natural substrate, dATP (0.38 µM) (33). This is analogous to what was observed for HIV reverse transcriptase, where TFV-DP had a Ki of 0.16 µM, AFV-DP had a Ki of 0.07 µM, and the Km of dATP was 0.33 µM (16, 32). Overall, tenofovir appears to inhibit HIV and HBV by the same mechanism (inhibition of viral DNA polymerization). However, it should be noted that assays to study inhibition in greater detail (e.g., individual contributions of nucleotide incorporation and excision) are not currently available for HBV (31).
In cell culture, tenofovir had an EC50 of 1 µM against wild-type HBV using the stable cell line HepG2.2.15; this is similar to previous reports which have used either 2.2.15 cells or other stable cell lines (7, 35). Addition of the two soproxil progroups to tenofovir lowers the EC50 to 0.02 µM, a 50-fold increase in activity. This improvement in potency is likely due to significantly improved cellular permeability as the two hydroxyl groups of the phosphonic acid are covered with uncharged lipophilic promoieties. Indeed, analysis of permeability using a Caco-2 assay indicated that tenofovir DF had moderate cell permeability while tenofovir had low cell permeability (data not shown).
Clinical experience with famciclovir, lamivudine, ADV, and entecavir has indicated that resistance can be selected to all these compounds. Although resistant mutants emerge relatively slowly during ADV and entecavir therapy, it can be expected that resistance will become an increasing problem, since most patients require long-term therapy to adequately control disease. The cross-resistance profiles of all new agents should be carefully evaluated to guide the development of rational treatment regimens. Like adefovir, tenofovir retains activity against all of the major patterns of lamivudine resistance mutations in vitro and clinically (17, 18, 35). Our results indicated that tenofovir showed a small but reproducible decrease in susceptibility (3- to 4.2-fold) to clinical HBV isolates bearing rtN236T, the most common adefovir-associated resistance mutation. These findings are in agreement with a recent report by Brunelle et al., who observed a 4.5-fold shift in the tenofovir EC50 after introduction of rtN236T into a laboratory strain of HBV (2).
It is important to note that the in vitro rtN236T susceptibility shift observed for tenofovir is smaller than that of adefovir (7.3- to 13.8-fold) and that tenofovir DF is administered clinically at a dose 30 times higher than adefovir dipivoxil (300 mg versus 10 mg, respectively). The combination of a smaller susceptibility shift and a significantly higher dose may enable tenofovir DF to effectively suppress serum HBV DNA in patients with the rtN236T mutant. Indeed, two recent reports indicated that two patients with rtN236T had serum HBV DNA reductions of
4 log10 copies/ml when switched from ADV to tenofovir DF therapy (20, 30). Similarly, patients with rtN236T also respond to therapy with 100 mg of lamivudine despite a 2.1- to 3.5-fold in vitro decrease in lamivudine susceptibility (19). Future studies are needed to determine the best treatment options for patients with rtN236T; however, early clinical data indicate that tenofovir DF and lamivudine should each be explored.
We also studied the impact of the rtA194T mutation, which was recently reported to emerge in two HIV/HBV-coinfected patients receiving tenofovir DF plus lamivudine as part of their antiretroviral treatment regimen (26). Our phenotypic analysis indicated that rtA194T did not cause a significant change in tenofovir susceptibility either alone or when expressed in combination with lamivudine resistance mutations (EC50 values changed 1.5- to 2.5-fold). These results do not agree with those reported by Sheldon et al., who observed a 7.6-fold change with the single rtA194T mutation and a >10-fold increase in the EC50 when rtA194T was expressed with lamivudine resistance mutations (26). The discrepancy might be explained by differences between the EC50 assays used in the two labs. Our results were obtained using standard Southern blotting procedures to quantify intracellular HBV replication, whereas Sheldon et al. used a PCR assay to quantify extracellular HBV DNA following transient transfection. Examining the clinical data does not provide a clear association of rtA194T with viral load rebound: one patient had a transient viral load increase of 1.5 logs after the mutation emerged, while the second patient had continuous viral load decline after the emergence of rtA194T and a >9 log10 decline in serum HBV DNA after the initiation of tenofovir DF plus lamivudine therapy. We are not aware of any additional patients who have developed this mutation under tenofovir DF therapy. Nevertheless, this residue should be monitored closely during the clinical development of tenofovir DF for chronic hepatitis B.
Studies of the anabolism of tenofovir to its active diphosphate form were previously restricted to lymphoid cells to support the HIV indication of tenofovir DF (21, 24). Here we have shown that tenofovir phosphorylation occurs efficiently in a human hepatoblast cell line (HepG2) and in primary human hepatocytes. In the CEM (lymphoid) cell line, TFV-DP achieved levels of 5.2 µM, which is similar to the levels we observed in HepG2 cells (6.0 µM). However, TFV-DP formation in primary human hepatocytes was significantly greater (4.7 µM) than in primary lymphocytes (1.0 µM levels reached in peripheral blood mononuclear cells) (21). In parallel experiments, the efficiency of TFV-DP formation was greater than that of adefovir in both cell types that we tested; however, the difference in primary human hepatocytes (<2-fold) was smaller than in HepG2 cells (2.5-fold).
Tenofovir diphosphate increased in a linear manner over the 24-hour incubation period. Linear increases over the same time period were also observed for adefovir diphosphate when run in parallel during these experiments as well as in previous studies (22). The linear accumulation of adefovir and tenofovir diphosphates over 24 hours is in contrast to most nucleoside analogs, which usually reach a maximal intracellular concentration after 8 to 12 h. However, this result is consistent with the reduced permeability of adefovir and tenofovir due to the presence of the two negative charges on the phosphonate moiety. Similar studies conducted on T cells in our laboratory indicate that tenofovir diphosphate levels begin to reach maximal concentrations after 48 hours of incubation (data not shown). The diphosphates of both tenofovir and adefovir had very long intracellular half-lives, which is consistent with earlier studies demonstrating prolonged in vitro antiviral effects with tenofovir and adefovir after drug removal (38). Overall, the efficient phosphorylation and long half-life we observed for tenofovir agree with the clinical results indicating that a single daily dose of tenofovir DF will be phosphorylated to levels sufficient to exert a potent antiviral effect in the liver.
Due to its favorable safety profile and efficacy, tenofovir DF is a recommended first-line treatment option for HIV infection (37). Multiple small investigator studies have demonstrated that the 300-mg dose of tenofovir DF approved for HIV also results in a potent antiviral suppression of serum HBV DNA (>4 log10 reduction in serum HBV copies/ml) in coinfected patients (5, 23, 28, 29). The in vitro data presented here have confirmed that tenofovir inhibits HIV and HBV by similar mechanisms (competitive inhibition of DNA polymerization) and that tenofovir DF has potent cell-based anti-HBV activity (EC50, 0.02 µM). Tenofovir also has a favorable metabolic profile in hepatic cells, the target compartment for antiviral activity in vivo. Accordingly, enrollment has recently begun for phase III studies of tenofovir DF in HBV e antigen-negative and e antigen-positive chronic hepatitis B patients. We have also shown that tenofovir is more efficacious than adefovir against the rtN236T adefovir resistance mutation in vitro. Since significantly higher doses of tenofovir DF are being used clinically, these data suggest tenofovir should also be explored for the treatment of adefovir-resistant HBV.
Present address: Covance Inc., Rm. 503, 457 Wu Lu Mu Qi (N) Rd., Shanghai, China. ![]()
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