Publication | Open Access
Design of a superior cytokine antagonist for topical ophthalmic use
59
Citations
35
References
2013
Year
Ocular DiseaseImmunologyImmune RegulationImmunologic MechanismInnate ImmunityDermatologyImmune SystemOcular PharmacologyImmune DysregulationInflammationMolecular PharmacologyTopical DrugCell SignalingThermal StabilityRheumatoid ArthritisSuperior Cytokine AntagonistMolecular SignalingOphthalmologyImmunoengineeringT Cell ImmunityImmune FunctionOcular PathologyPharmacologyMolecular ImmunologyAnti-inflammatoryExperimental OphthalmologyWound HealingIl-1 Receptor LigandsMedicineSmall Molecules
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.
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