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  2. Exploring the interactions of JAK inhibitor and S1P receptor modulator drugs with the human gut microbiome: Implications for colonic drug delivery and inflammatory bowel disease

Exploring the interactions of JAK inhibitor and S1P receptor modulator drugs with the human gut microbiome: Implications for colonic drug delivery and inflammatory bowel disease

  • Eur J Pharm Sci. 2024 Sep 1:200:106845. doi: 10.1016/j.ejps.2024.106845.
Alessia Favaron 1 Youssef Abdalla 1 Laura E McCoubrey 1 Laxmi Prasanna Nandiraju 1 David Shorthouse 1 Simon Gaisford 1 Abdul W Basit 2 Mine Orlu 3
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 UCL School of Pharmacy, 29-39 Brunswick Square, London, WC1N 1AX, United Kingdom.
  • 2 UCL School of Pharmacy, 29-39 Brunswick Square, London, WC1N 1AX, United Kingdom. Electronic address: a.basit@ucl.ac.uk.
  • 3 UCL School of Pharmacy, 29-39 Brunswick Square, London, WC1N 1AX, United Kingdom. Electronic address: m.orlu@ucl.ac.uk.
Abstract

The gut microbiota is a complex ecosystem, home to hundreds of Bacterial species and a vast repository of Enzymes capable of metabolising a wide range of pharmaceuticals. Several drugs have been shown to affect negatively the composition and function of the gut microbial ecosystem. Janus Kinase (JAK) inhibitors and Sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P) receptor modulators are drugs recently approved for inflammatory bowel disease through an immediate release formulation and would potentially benefit from colonic targeted delivery to enhance the local drug concentration at the diseased site. However, their impact on the human gut microbiota and susceptibility to Bacterial metabolism remain unexplored. With the use of calorimetric, optical density measurements, and metagenomics next-generation Sequencing, we show that JAK inhibitors (tofacitinib citrate, baricitinib, filgotinib) have a minor impact on the composition of the human gut microbiota, while ozanimod exerts a significant antimicrobial effect, leading to a prevalence of the Enterococcus genus and a markedly different metabolic landscape when compared to the untreated microbiota. Moreover, ozanimod, unlike the JAK inhibitors, is the only drug subject to enzymatic degradation by the human gut microbiota sourced from six healthy donors. Overall, given the crucial role of the gut microbiome in health, screening assays to investigate the interaction of drugs with the microbiota should be encouraged for the pharmaceutical industry as a standard in the drug discovery and development process.

Keywords

Bioaccumulation; Biotransformation; Colonic drug delivery; Drug metabolism, JAK inhibitors; Drug-microbiome interactions; Gut microbiota; Ozanimod.

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