4.5 Article

Retinal Toxicity, in vivo and in vitro, Associated with Inhibition of Nicotinamide Phosphoribosyltransferase

Journal

TOXICOLOGICAL SCIENCES
Volume 144, Issue 1, Pages 163-172

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/toxsci/kfu268

Keywords

eye; messenger RNA; tumor metabolism; nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide; nicotinic acid mononucleotide; pathology; retinal degeneration; retinal pigmented epithelial cell culture

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Nicotinamide phosphoribosyltransferase (NAMPT) is a pleiotropic protein with intra-and extra-cellular functions as an enzyme, cytokine, growth factor, and hormone. NAMPT is of interest for oncology, because it catalyzes the rate-limiting step in the salvage pathway to generate nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD), which is considered a universal energy- and signal-carrying molecule involved in cellular energy metabolismand many homeostatic functions. This manuscript describes NAMPT inhibitor-induced retinal toxicity that was identified in rodent safety studies. This toxicity had a rapid onset and progression and initially targeted the photoreceptor and outer nuclear layers. Using in vivo safety and efficacy rodent studies, human and mouse cell line potency data, human and rat retinal pigmented epithelial cell in vitro systems, and rat mRNA expression data of NAMPT, nicotinic acid phosphoribosyltransferase, and nicotinamide mononucleotide adenylyltransferease (NMNAT) in several tissues from rat including retina, we demonstrate that the retinal toxicity is on-target and likely human relevant. We demonstrate that this toxicity is not mitigated by coadministration of nicotinic acid (NA), which can enable NAD production through the NAMPT-independent pathway. Further, modifying the physiochemical properties of NAMPT inhibitors could not sufficiently reduce retinal exposure. Our work highlights opportunities to leverage appropriately designed efficacy studies to identify known and measurable safety findings to screen compounds more rapidly and reduce animal use. It also demonstrates that in vitro systems with the appropriate cell composition and relevant biology and toxicity endpoints can provide tools to investigate mechanism of toxicity and the human translation of nonclinical safety concerns.

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