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Repurposing calcium-sensing receptor agonist cinacalcet for treatment of CFTR-mediated secretory diarrheas
Apurva A. Oak, Parth D. Chhetri, Amber A. Rivera, Alan S. Verkman, Onur Cil
Apurva A. Oak, Parth D. Chhetri, Amber A. Rivera, Alan S. Verkman, Onur Cil
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Research Article Gastroenterology Therapeutics

Repurposing calcium-sensing receptor agonist cinacalcet for treatment of CFTR-mediated secretory diarrheas

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Abstract

Diarrhea is a major cause of global mortality, and outbreaks of secretory diarrhea such as cholera remain an important problem in the developing world. Current treatment of secretory diarrhea primarily involves supportive measures, such as fluid replacement. The calcium-sensing receptor (CaSR) regulates multiple biological activities in response to changes in extracellular Ca2+. The FDA-approved drug cinacalcet is an allosteric activator of CaSR used for treatment of hyperparathyroidism. Here, we found by short-circuit current measurements in human colonic T84 cells that CaSR activation by cinacalcet reduced forskolin-induced Cl– secretion by greater than 80%. Cinacalcet also reduced Cl– secretion induced by cholera toxin, heat-stable E. coli enterotoxin, and vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP). The cinacalcet effect primarily involved indirect inhibition of cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator–mediated (CFTR-mediated) Cl– secretion following activation of CaSR and downstream phospholipase C and phosphodiesterases. In mice, cinacalcet reduced fluid accumulation by more than 60% in intestinal closed loop models of cholera and traveler’s diarrhea. The cinacalcet effect involved both inhibition of CFTR-mediated secretion and stimulation of sodium-hydrogen exchanger 3–mediated absorption. These findings support the therapeutic utility of the safe and commonly used drug cinacalcet in CFTR-dependent secretory diarrheas, including cholera, traveler’s diarrhea, and VIPoma.

Authors

Apurva A. Oak, Parth D. Chhetri, Amber A. Rivera, Alan S. Verkman, Onur Cil

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Figure 2

Cinacalcet inhibition of CFTR-mediated Cl– secretion is indirect and depends on CaSR.

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Cinacalcet inhibition of CFTR-mediated Cl– secretion is indirect and dep...
(A) ISC traces in Fischer rat thyroid cells expressing CFTR, showing responses to forskolin (10 μM) and CFTRinh-172 (10 μM) following 20-minute pretreatment without and with 30 μM cinacalcet. The basolateral cell membrane was permeabilized with amphotericin B (250 μg/mL) for 30 minutes, and measurement was done using a 60 mM basolateral-to-apical Cl– gradient. (B) Summary of data from experiments as in A showing Δ ISC with forskolin followed by CFTRinh-172. n = 10–11 experiments per group. (C) ISC in human bronchial epithelial (HBE) cells sequentially treated with amiloride (20 μM), forskolin (20 μM), CFTRinh-172 (10 μM), and ATP (100 μM) without and with 20-minute pretreatment with 30 μM cinacalcet. (D) Summary of Δ ISC from experiments as in C. n = 3 experiments per group. Mean ± SEM, Student’s t test, **P < 0.01.

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