A Broad Blockade of Signaling from the IL-20 Family of Cytokines Potently Attenuates Collagen-Induced Arthritis

作者:Liu, Xinyu; Zhou, Hong; Huang, Xueqin; Cui, Jingjing; Long, Tianzhen; Xu, Yang; Liu, Haipeng; Yu, Ruoxuan; Zhao, Rongchuan; Luo, Guangping; Huang, Anliang; Liang, Joshua G.; Liang, Peng*
来源:The Journal of Immunology, 2016, 197(8): 3029-3037.
DOI:10.4049/jimmunol.1600399

摘要

Two heterodimeric receptors consisting of either IL-20R1 or IL-22R1 in complex with a common b receptor subunit IL-20R2 are shared by three of the IL-20 family of cytokines: IL-19, IL-20, and IL-24. These proinflammatory cytokines have been implicated in the pathogenesis of some autoimmune diseases, including rheumatoid arthritis (RA), psoriasis, and atopic dermatitis. Although mAbs against IL-19 and IL-20 have each been shown to modulate disease severity of collagen-induced arthritis in animal models, and anti-IL-20 therapeutic Ab has exhibited some efficacy in the treatment of RA in clinical trials, benefits for a complete blockade of these functionally redundant cytokines remain to be explored. In this report, we show that recombinant human soluble IL-20R2-Fc fusion protein binds to IL-19, IL-20, and IL-24 with similar high affinity and blocks their signaling in vitro. In DBA/1 mouse collagen-induced arthritis model, recombinant human IL-20R2-Fc exhibits comparable efficacy as TNF blocker etanercept in the treatment of established arthritis, whereas the combined use of both biologics manifests little synergistic therapeutic effects. In situ ligand-receptor functional binding analysis shows that a large amount of immune infiltrates expressing high levels of TNFR and IL-20 subfamily cytokines congregate within the inflamed disease tissues. Colocalization experiments reveal that signals from IL-20R2 and TNF transduction pathways seem to converge in macrophages and function in tandem in orchestrating the pathogenesis of RA. Elucidation of this interaction provides a better understanding of cytokine cross-talk in RA and a rationale for more effective biologic therapies that target IL-20R2 instead of individual cytokines from IL-20 family.