The long circulating half-life of serum albumin, the most abundant protein in mammalian plasma, derives from pH-dependent endosomal salvage from degradation, mediated by the neonatal Fc receptor (FcRn). Using yeast display, we identified human serum albumin (HSA) variants with increased affinity for human FcRn at endosomal pH, enabling us to solve the crystal structure of a variant HSA/FcRn complex. We find an extensive, primarily hydrophobic interface stabilized by hydrogen-bonding networks involving protonated histidines internal to each protein. The interface features two key FcRn tryptophan side chains inserting into deep hydrophobic pockets on HSA that overlap albumin ligand binding sites. We find that fatty acids (FAs) compete with FcRn, revealing a clash between ligand binding and recycling, and that our high-affinity HSA variants have significantly increased circulating half-lives in mice and monkeys. These observations open the way for the creation of biotherapeutics with significantly improved pharmacokinetics.
The ability of mature T lymphocytes to develop effector capacity after encounter with cognate Ag is generally dependent upon inflammatory signals associated with infection that induce dendritic cell activation/maturation. These inflammatory signals can derive directly from pathogens or can be expressed by host cells in response to infection. Heat shock proteins (HSPs) are a class of host-derived inflammatory mediators that perform the duel function of both chaperoning MHC class I-restricted epitopes into the cross-presentation pathway of DCs and inducing the activation/maturation of these DCs to allow priming of cognate CD8+ T cell effector responses. Although the ability of HSPs to elicit effector CD8 cell responses has been well established, their potential to prime CD4 cell effector responses has been relatively unexplored. In the current study we compared the ability of the endoplasmic reticulum-resident HSP gp96 to prime CD4 vs CD8 cells using TCR transgenic adoptive transfer systems and soluble gp96-peptide complexes. As expected, gp96 facilitated the cross-presentation of a class I-restricted peptide and priming of effector function in cognate CD8 cells. Interestingly, gp96 also facilitated the in vivo presentation of a class II-restricted peptide; however, the resulting CD4 cell response did not involve the development of effector function. Taken together, these data suggest that gp96 is an inflammatory mediator that selectively primes CD8 cell effector function.
Injury causes tissue breakdown, which releases large quantities of intracellular contents into the extracellular space. Some of these materials are well-established activators of the immune system and include heat shock proteins (HSPs), uric acid, nucleotides, High Mobility Group Box-1 protein (HMGB-1), and DNA. Here, we show that in vivo delivery of HSPs into BALB/cJ mice with full-thickness wounds accelerates the rate of wound closure by 60% as compared with control-treated mice. The onset is rapid and the effect is sustained, dose dependent, and protein specific. Adoptive transfer of RAW264 macrophages pretreated with HSP70 into naïve recipients with a wound transfers the HSP-mediated effect on the rate of wound closure. Further, we demonstrate that part of the mechanism by which HSP70 accelerates wound closure is through the stimulation of macrophage-mediated phagocytosis of wound debris. Disabling the HSP70-mediated enhancement of phagocytosis abrogates the HSP-mediated acceleration of the healing process. These findings create two opportunities: one, therapeutic, wherein HSP70 could be used in the clinical management of wounds; and two, pathophysiologic, to decode signals by which the host defenses recognize and respond to injury.
Immunization with heat-shock protein (HSP) gp96 elicits protective immunity to the cancer or virus-infected cells from which it is derived. Low doses of gp96 generate immunity, while doses 10 times the immunizing dose do not. We show here that injection of high doses of gp96 generates CD4(+) T cells that down-regulate a variety of ongoing immune responses. Immunization with high doses of gp96 prevents myelin basic protein- or proteolipid protein-induced autoimmune encephalomyelitis in SJL mice and the onset of diabetes in non-obese diabetic mice. The suppression of immune response can be adoptively transferred with CD4(+) cells and does not partition with the CD25 phenotype. The immunomodulatory properties of gp96 (and possibly other HSP) may be used for antigen-specific activation or suppression of cellular immune responses. The latter may form the basis for novel immunotherapies for autoimmune diseases.
IL-1 is a key inflammatory and immune mediator in many diseases, including dry-eye disease, and its inhibition is clinically efficacious in rheumatoid arthritis and cryopyrin-associated periodic syndromes. To treat ocular surface disease with a topical biotherapeutic, the uniqueness of the site necessitates consideration of the agent's size, target location, binding kinetics, and thermal stability. Here we chimerized two IL-1 receptor ligands, IL-1β and IL-1Ra, to create an optimized receptor antagonist, EBI-005, for topical ocular administration. EBI-005 binds its target, IL-1R1, 85-fold more tightly than IL-1Ra, and this increase translates to an ∼100-fold increase in potency in vivo. EBI-005 preserves the affinity bias of IL-1Ra for IL-1R1 over the decoy receptor (IL-1R2), and, surprisingly, is also more thermally stable than either parental molecule. This rationally designed antagonist represents a unique approach to therapeutic design that can potentially be exploited for other β-trefoil family proteins in the IL-1 and FGF families.T he IL-1 cytokines (IL-1α and IL-1β) are master mediators of inflammatory responses (1). IL-1β also regulates immune function through its role in T helper 17 (Th17) cell differentiation and maintenance (2, 3). IL-1 action has been implicated in numerous human diseases, including rheumatoid arthritis, MuckleWells syndrome, gout, type 2 diabetes, and stroke (4). Several natural mechanisms directly oppose the actions of IL-1, including a soluble and cell surface decoy receptor (IL-1R2), a natural antagonist (IL-1Ra), and a soluble signaling receptor (IL-1R1) (5). Therapeutics that block IL-1 based on these mechanisms have been developed (6-8).Recently, a nonoptimized formulation of anakinra (methionyl-IL-1Ra; Kineret) was shown to provide clinical benefit in dry-eye disease (DED) (9). Moderate to severe DED is a chronic inflammatory condition of the corneal surface that results in pain, discomfort, and epitheliopathy (as measured by fluorescein staining). Inability to maintain a proper tear film over the cornea (owing to a variety of etiologies) results in desiccating stress, which drives an inflammatory cascade (10, 11). IL-1 plays a central role in the initiation and maintenance of this cascade, as well as in the pain mediated by the corneal neural plexus. IL-1α and IL-1β protein are elevated in the lacrimal gland, tears, and the ocular surface in all forms of dry-eye disease (12), and their mRNA is increased in both humans and in rodent disease models (13,14). Genetic ablation of IL-1R1, the primary receptor for IL-1α and IL-1β, can block the development of corneal staining in a Sjögren syndrome corneal epitheliopathy model (15), and topically administered anakinra can improve surface epithliopathy in a mouse dry-eye model (14). IL-1β is essential for Th17 cell differentiation and maintenance, and Th17 cells are likely the main effector cells that induce epithelial damage (2, 3). Genetic and pharmacologic studies have shown that IL-1β mediates, and IL-1Ra blocks, normal, inflamm...
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