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The blood-brain barrier significantly limits eflornithine entry into Trypanosoma brucei brucei infected mouse brain.

Abstract
Drugs to treat African trypanosomiasis are toxic, expensive and subject to parasite resistance. New drugs are urgently being sought. Although the existing drug, eflornithine, is assumed to reach the brain in high concentrations, little is known about how it crosses the healthy and infected blood-brain barrier. This information is essential for the design of drug combinations and new drugs. This study used novel combinations of animal models to address these omissions. Eflornithine crossed the healthy blood-CNS interfaces poorly, but this could be improved by co-administering suramin, but not nifurtimox, pentamidine or melarsoprol. Work using a murine model of sleeping sickness demonstrated that Trypanosoma brucei brucei crossed the blood-CNS interfaces, which remained functional, early in the course of infection. Concentrations of brain parasites increased during the infection and this resulted in detectable blood-brain barrier, but not choroid plexus, dysfunction at day 28 post-infection with resultant increases in eflornithine brain delivery. Barrier integrity was never restored and the animals died at day 37.9 +/- 1.2. This study indicates why an intensive treatment regimen of eflornithine is required (poor blood-brain barrier penetration) and suggests a possible remedy (combining eflornithine with suramin). The blood-brain barrier retains functionality until a late, possibly terminal stage, of trypanosoma infection.
AuthorsLisa Sanderson, Murat Dogruel, Jean Rodgers, Barbara Bradley, Sarah Ann Thomas
JournalJournal of neurochemistry (J Neurochem) Vol. 107 Issue 4 Pg. 1136-46 (Nov 2008) ISSN: 1471-4159 [Electronic] England
PMID18823367 (Publication Type: Journal Article, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't)
Chemical References
  • ATP Binding Cassette Transporter, Subfamily B, Member 1
  • Carbon Isotopes
  • Trypanocidal Agents
  • Tritium
  • Sucrose
  • Eflornithine
Topics
  • ATP Binding Cassette Transporter, Subfamily B, Member 1 (deficiency)
  • Animals
  • Blood-Brain Barrier (drug effects, parasitology, physiopathology)
  • Brain (drug effects, parasitology)
  • Carbon Isotopes (metabolism)
  • Disease Models, Animal
  • Eflornithine (pharmacokinetics, therapeutic use)
  • Mice
  • Mice, Inbred BALB C
  • Mice, Transgenic
  • Sucrose (metabolism)
  • Time Factors
  • Tritium (pharmacokinetics)
  • Trypanocidal Agents (pharmacokinetics, therapeutic use)
  • Trypanosoma brucei brucei (pathogenicity)
  • Trypanosomiasis, African (drug therapy, pathology)

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