Treating murine inflammatory diseases with an anti-erythrocyte antibody
SCIENCE TRANSLATIONAL MEDICINE
Authors: Crow, Andrew R.; Kapur, Rick; Koernig, Sandra; Campbell, Ian K.; Jen, Chao-Ching; Mott, Patrick J.; Marjoram, Danielle; Khan, Ramsha; Kim, Michael; Brasseit, Jennifer; Cruz-Leal, Yoelys; Amash, Alaa; Kahlon, Simrat; Yougbare, Issaka; Ni, Heyu; Zuercher, Adrian W.; Kasermann, Fabian; Semple, John W.; Lazarus, Alan H.
Abstract
Treatment of autoimmune and inflammatory diseases typically involves immune suppression. In an opposite strategy, we show that administration of the highly inflammatory erythrocyte-specific antibody Ter119 into mice remodels the monocyte cellular landscape, leading to resolution of inflammatory disease. Ter119 with intact Fc function was unexpectedly therapeutic in the K/BxN serum transfer model of arthritis. Similarly, it rapidly reversed clinical disease progression in collagen antibody-induced arthritis (CAIA) and collagen-induced arthritis and completely corrected CAIA-induced increase in monocyte Fc gamma receptor II/III expression. Ter119 dose-dependently induced plasma chemokines CCL2, CCL5, CXCL9, CXCL10, and CCL11 with corresponding alterations in monocyte percentages in the blood and liver within 24 hours. Ter119 attenuated chemokine production from the synovial fluid and prevented the accumulation of inflammatory cells and complement components in the synovium. Ter119 could also accelerate the resolution of hypothermia and pulmonary edema in an acute lung injury model. We conclude that this inflammatory anti-erythrocyte antibody simultaneously triggers a highly efficient anti-inflammatory effect with broad therapeutic potential.
Structural Insights into the Interaction between a Potent Anti-inflammatory Protein, Viral CC Chemokine Inhibitor (vCCI), and the Human CC Chemokine, Eotaxin-1
JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Authors: Kuo, Nai-Wei; Gao, Yong-Guang; Schill, Megan S.; Isern, Nancy; Dupureur, Cynthia M.; LiWang, Patricia J.
Abstract
Background: The mechanism used by viral protein vCCI to tightly bind to many CC chemokines is not known. Results: Specific positively charged residues in the chemokine eotaxin-1 mediate binding to vCCI. Conclusion: Basic residues in the chemokine each provide incremental affinity for vCCI. Significance: This work shows how vCCI can bind a variety of CC chemokines. Chemokines play important roles in the immune system, not only recruiting leukocytes to the site of infection and inflammation but also guiding cell homing and cell development. The soluble poxvirus-encoded protein viral CC chemokine inhibitor (vCCI), a CC chemokine inhibitor, can bind to human CC chemokines tightly to impair the host immune defense. This protein has no known homologs in eukaryotes and may represent a potent method to stop inflammation. Previously, our structure of the vCCIMIP-1 (macrophage inflammatory protein-1) complex indicated that vCCI uses negatively charged residues in -sheet II to interact with positively charged residues in the MIP-1 N terminus, 20s region and 40s loop. However, the interactions between vCCI and other CC chemokines have not yet been fully explored. Here, we used NMR and fluorescence anisotropy to study the interaction between vCCI and eotaxin-1 (CCL11), a CC chemokine that is an important factor in the asthma response. NMR results reveal that the binding pattern is very similar to the vCCIMIP-1 complex and suggest that electrostatic interactions provide a major contribution to binding. Fluorescence anisotropy results on variants of eotaxin-1 further confirm the critical roles of the charged residues in eotaxin-1. In addition, the binding affinity between vCCI and other wild type CC chemokines, MCP-1 (monocyte chemoattractant protein-1), MIP-1, and RANTES (regulated on activation normal T cell expressed and secreted), were determined as 1.1, 1.2, and 0.22 nm, respectively. To our knowledge, this is the first work quantitatively measuring the binding affinity between vCCI and multiple CC chemokines.