|
|
||||||||

* Vertex Pharmaceuticals, San Diego, CA 92121; and
Division of Rheumatology, Allergy, and Immunology and Department of Pediatrics, University of California at San Diego School of Medicine, La Jolla, CA 92093
| Abstract |
|---|
|
|
|---|
and IL-18. In this study, we examined cytokine secretion in PBMCs from FCAS patients and found a marked hyperresponsiveness of both IL-1
and IL-18 secretion to LPS stimulation, but no evidence of increased basal secretion of these cytokines, or alterations in basal or stimulated pro-IL-1
levels. VX-765, an orally active IL-converting enzyme/caspase-1 inhibitor, blocked IL-1
secretion with equal potency in LPS-stimulated cells from FCAS and control subjects. These results further link mutations in cryopyrin with abnormal caspase-1 activation, and support the clinical testing of caspase-1 inhibitors such as VX-765 in autoinflammatory disorders. | Introduction |
|---|
|
|
|---|
CIAS1 encodes cryopryin, an adaptor protein expressed in immune cells that contains at least three well-known protein-protein interaction domains, including a pyrin domain, a nucleotide binding site (NBS) domain, and a leucine-rich repeat domain. The pyrin domain and NBS domain associate with two adaptor proteins, apoptosis-associated speck-like protein containing a CARD (ASC) and CARDINAL, respectively. These proteins, in turn, bind the IL-converting enzyme (ICE)/caspase-1 through caspase recruitment domain (CARD)-domain interactions (8). A multiprotein inflammasome, formed by the association of all of these proteins, is involved in the proteolytic activation of ICE/caspase-1 in monocytes/macrophages, resulting in IL-1
and IL-18 production and subsequent activation of immune responses (9).
The recently reported finding of alterations in IL-1
production in monocytes from NOMID and MWS patients is consistent with the proposed role for cryopyrin in ICE/caspase-1 activation. In one study of CIAS1 mutations in NOMID (2), pro-IL-1
levels were elevated in unstimulated monocytes from a patient with a D303N mutation, although the response to LPS treatment was blunted compared with controls. In a more recent study of a different NOMID patient with the D303N mutation (10), IL-1
and IL-18 secretion were elevated in both unstimulated as well as LPS-stimulated whole blood cells. Adherent monocytes from a MWS patient with a R260W mutation also had elevated basal and LPS-stimulated IL-1
secretion (8).
Recent clinical studies in patients with cryopyrin-associated inflammatory disorders have suggested that IL-1 dysregulation is the key pathogenic mechanism involved in all three disorders. MWS patients showed a remarkable response to treatment with the human rIL-1 receptor antagonist, anakinra, with a rapid reduction in inflammatory symptoms and normalization of serum amyloid A levels (11, 12). Rapid amelioration of symptoms upon treatment with anakinra has also been reported recently in NOMID (13, 14). Additionally, anakinra treatment before cold exposure prevented clinical symptoms and laboratory signs of inflammation in FCAS patients (15). These rapid positive clinical responses to treatment with anakinra strongly indicate that IL-1 is a central mediator of disease in these autoinflammatory syndromes.
The positive clinical results with anakinra in these inflammatory disorders, along with the potential role of cryopyrin in ICE/caspase-1 activation, provide the rationale for a clinical study to test caspase-1 inhibition as a means of treating the autoinflammatory disorders. VX-765 is the orally available prodrug of a potent and selective competitive inhibitor of ICE/caspase-1. VX-765 is currently under clinical development for the treatment of inflammatory and autoimmune conditions. In preparation for clinical trials of VX-765 in autoinflammatory disorders, we examined whether the ICE/caspase-1-mediated release of IL-1
and IL-18 is indeed enhanced in PBMCs from FCAS patients compared with normal subjects, and whether the efficacy and potency of VX-765 to inhibit this response are altered by mutations in cryopyrin.
| Materials and Methods |
|---|
|
|
|---|
The study received the approval of the University of California Human Research Protection Program committee, and informed consent was obtained from the subjects before the study. Eight patients with FCAS were included in the study, seven female and one male, with ages ranging from 21 to 86 years and mean age of 56 ± 20 (SD) years. Control subjects were five age-matched male spouses and one unaffected son, ages ranging from 19 to 83 and mean age of 60 ± 24 (SD) years. All of the FCAS patients had a classic clinical presentation and met diagnostic criteria, as described previously (6). None of the FCAS or control subjects were experiencing significant inflammatory symptoms at the time of study, and none were on regular anti-inflammatory medications. Three of the FCAS patients in this study were treated previously with 2 doses of anakinra >6 mo before this study. None of the FCAS subjects had evidence of neurologic symptoms, skeletal abnormalities, hearing loss, or amyloidosis.
The FCAS patients were from three families, and expressed three different CIAS1 gene mutations. Five related patients (mother, two daughters, granddaughter, and a distant male relative) possessed the common L353P ancestral mutation in cryopyrin that has been described previously (16). The other patients possessed novel mutations that have not been reported. Two patients (mother and daughter) had a T-to-A transition at nt 1976 in the CIAS1 gene, leading to a M659K substitution in cryopyrin. One patient had a G-to-A transition at nt 1573 in the CIAS1 gene, generating a E525K amino acid substitution that has not been reported, as well as the V198M variation described previously in several patients with diverse phenotypes, but also in normal controls. All of the mutations are located in exon 3, which encodes the NBS (NACHT) domain or NBS-associated domain, and all are within 3 aa of other reported mutations, consistent with studies suggesting mutational hot spots (17).
VX-765
VX-765 (synthesized by Vertex Pharmaceuticals) was prepared as a DMSO stock solution and diluted to appropriate concentrations in medium, as described below. VX-765 is a prodrug that is converted to its active metabolite, VRT-043198, both in vivo and in vitro by enzymatic and hydrolytic cleavage (to be reported separately). VRT-043198 binds to the catalytic site and competitively inhibits ICE/caspase-1 with an inhibition constant (Ki) = 0.8 nM. VX-765 inhibits the release of LPS-induced IL-1
and IL-18 by human PBMCs with an IC50 of
0.7 µM and reduces inflammatory response in murine models of inflammatory disease (W. Wannamaker, R. Davies, M. Namchuk, J. Pollard, P. Ford, G. Ku, C. Decker, K. Kuida, and J. Randle, manuscript in preparation).
Preparation of PBMCs
Venous blood was drawn from donors into EDTA/Vacutainer tubes at 1011 a.m., the time of the day when FCAS patients are generally least symptomatic. Blood (25 ml) was layered over 10 ml of Ficoll in 50-ml conical tubes, and centrifuged for 30 min at 1500 rpm at 22°C. The PBMC fractions were collected and pooled for each patient; the volume was adjusted to 50 ml with room temperature PBS; and samples were centrifuged for 10 min at 1200 rpm. Cell pellets were resuspended in 50 ml of PBS/tube and centrifuged a second time for 5 min at 1200 rpm. Supernatants were aspirated, and cell pellets were resuspended in prewarmed RPMI 1640 complete medium containing 10% FBS, nonessential amino acids, 50 µM 2-ME, 1 mM Na pyruvate, and penicillin/streptomycin. Cells were counted with hemacytometer, and cell density was adjusted to 2 million cells/ml by addition of RPMI 1640 complete medium.
Assay for secreted cytokines
A total of 2 x 105 cells/well (100 µl cell suspension) was distributed in triplicate in flat-bottom 96-well plates. Either 50 µl of VX-765 (40 µM in RPMI 1640 complete medium containing 0.2% DMSO) or vehicle control was added to appropriate wells. Following a 30-min incubation at 37°C, 50 µl of LPS (Escherichia coli O111:B4; Calbiochem) diluted in RPMI 1640 complete medium was added at final concentrations varying from 0.001 to 10 ng/ml. Cells were returned to a 37°C incubator. At 4 h after LPS addition, 75 µl of supernatant was removed from wells, cleared by centrifugation for 5 min at 1500 rpm, and stored at 4°C until assayed. Cells were returned to a 37°C incubator until 24 h after LPS addition, at which time 100 µl of supernatant was removed, cleared by centrifugation, and stored at 4°C. Supernatants were tested using ELISA kits for IL-1
(BD Pharmingen; catalogue 558848), IL-6 (eBioscience; catalogue 88-7066), IL-18 (R&D Systems; catalogue 7620), and IL-1
(R&D Systems; catalogue DLA-50), according to the manufacturers instruction.
Immunoblotting
A total of 106 cells/well (500 µl cell suspension) was distributed in 24-well plates. Cells were treated with VX-765 and LPS, as described above, adjusted for 1 ml final volume. At 4 h after addition of LPS, all of the medium was transferred to 1.5-ml tubes and centrifuged at 1000 x g for 5 min at 4°C to pellet the suspended cells, and supernatants were removed. To lyse attached cells, 100 µl of 1x NuPage sample buffer (NOVEX) plus 2-ME were added to each well, and plates were placed on an orbital shaker. The 100 µl of sample buffer in the wells was transferred to corresponding pellets and boiled for 15 min, then frozen at 20°C. Samples were boiled again before loading onto a 412% Bis-Tris NuPage gel and run with NuPage MES running buffer. Gels were transferred to nitrocellulose filters. Filters were blotted in TBST (0.05% Tween 20) + 5% dry milk. For IL-1
immunoblotting, blots were incubated overnight at 4°C with 1:2,000 mouse anti-IL-1
(Sigma-Aldrich) primary Ab, then incubated with 1:10,000 HRP goat anti-mouse secondary Ab for 1 h, and developed with ECL (Pierce SuperSignal Dura Western Substrate).
| Results |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Because of the evidence suggesting the involvement of cryopyrin in IL-1
production, we measured IL-1
secretion from PBMCs obtained from FCAS patients and controls. Levels of IL-1
secreted after 4- or 24-h exposure to LPS were markedly greater for PBMCs from FCAS patients than unaffected donors (Fig. 1). IL-1
released in the absence of LPS treatment was below the level of detection in PBMCs from patients and controls. Exposure to as little as 0.01 ng/ml LPS for 4 h, which produced negligible IL-1
secretion from control cells, stimulated robust secretion from PBMCs of FCAS patients. IL-1
released at the highest concentration of LPS (10 ng/ml) was 2.1- to 2.7-fold higher in PBMCs from FCAS patients. Consistent with the involvement of ICE/caspase-1 in the processing of pro-IL-1
, the caspase-1 inhibitor VX-765 (10 µM) markedly (>80%) inhibited release of IL-1
from both FCAS and control cells (Fig. 1).
|
, undergoes proteolytic maturation by ICE/caspase-1, so levels of this cytokine in cell medium were also measured. The level of IL-18 release was
100-fold lower than that of IL-1
. As with IL-1
, LPS-stimulated release of IL-18 was strikingly higher in PBMCs from FCAS patients compared with control subjects and was markedly inhibited by VX-765 at 10 µM (Fig. 2). Also like IL-1
, there was no detectable constitutive release of IL-18 in the absence of LPS exposure, while there was significant IL-18 release from FCAS cells at low LPS concentrations that did not produce IL-18 release in normal cells.
|
in the cell medium after 24-h exposure to LPS (Fig. 3). In marked contrast to IL-1
and IL-18, secretion of IL-6 was not increased in PBMCs from FCAS compared with control subjects. Secretion of IL-1
appeared to be lower in FCAS than in controls (Fig. 3), although results were available from only two control subjects. At the highest concentration of LPS (10 ng/ml), IL-1
secretion was reduced by
50% in the presence of VX-765 (10 µM). Interestingly, IL-1
secretion is reduced in macrophages from ICE/caspase-1 knockout mice (18), suggesting that IL-1
secretion is partially dependent on ICE/caspase-1 or IL-1
levels.
|
and ICE/caspase-1 expression
It is possible that the increased cytokine secretion in FCAS patients is due to increased biosynthesis of precursors. To determine whether the increased IL-1
and IL-18 secretion in FCAS is due to dysregulation at the transcriptional or posttranslation level, the effects of LPS on pro-IL-1
expression were determined. In the absence of LPS stimulation, pro-IL-1
was not detectable in either FCAS or control PBMCs (Fig. 4). Pro-IL-1
expression increased markedly in response to LPS, but with no notable difference between FCAS and control PBMCs (Fig. 4), even at low LPS concentrations. This suggests that the difference observed in cytokine secretion between FCAS and control secretion was not due to differences in synthesis of the cytokine precursors.
|
Because the mutations in FCAS appear to affect the activity state of ICE/caspase-1, we tested whether the potency of VX-765 to inhibit ICE/caspase-1-mediated IL-1
production is altered by the mutations. The ability of VX-765 to inhibit IL-1
release was determined using PBMCs from three FCAS and three control subjects, measured after 24-h exposure to 10 ng/ml LPS. VX-765 inhibited IL-1
release with similar potency in PBMCs from FCAS (IC50 = 0.99 ± 0.29 µM) and control (IC50 = 1.10 ± 0.61 µM) subjects (Fig. 5).
|
| Discussion |
|---|
|
|
|---|
, rather than altered precursor biosynthesis, results from the cryopyrin mutations in FCAS.
Recent in vitro data suggest that disease-related mutations in cryopyrin are gain of function mutations. THP-1 cells (a monocytic cell line) transfected to overexpress mutant cryopyrin spontaneously secrete IL-1
(19). However, it is unclear whether this effect is due to increased transcription of pro-IL-1
, posttranslational cleavage of pro-IL-1
to its active secretable form, or a combination of both functions. Using a luciferase reporter assay, HEK293T cells transfected with mutant cryopyrin and ASC, a pyrin domain-containing adaptor protein that has been shown to interact with cryopyrin, have significantly increased NF-
B activity compared with cells with wild-type cryopyrin, supporting a transcriptional effect (19). However, immunoprecipitation experiments have shown that cryopyrin and ASC interact with other proteins, including CARDINAL and ICE/caspase-1, in a molecular platform called the inflammasome that is responsible for pro-IL-1
processing (8). Follow-up studies have also implicated cryopyrin as an intracellular sensor of muramyl peptides, the primary immunologically active component of peptidoglycan, and a common contaminant of most preparations of LPS (20), suggesting that the biosynthesis and release of IL-1
in response to LPS may have both TLR 4-dependent and independent components. The relative contributions of these cryopyrin functions have not been elucidated.
Our ex vivo data with FCAS PBMCs support a primarily posttranslational role for cryopyrin in IL-1
responses. The increased IL-1
and IL-18 release from the FCAS cells is evidence for ICE/caspase-1 dysregulation, as both of these cytokines are processed by ICE/caspase-1 to be released from the cell. In contrast, IL-6 and IL-1
levels in cell supernatants are either unchanged or somewhat reduced in FCAS, indicating that there is no increase in transcription or translation of other inflammatory cytokines not processed by ICE/caspase-1. The Western blot data (Fig. 4) also show no measurable difference between pro-IL-1
protein levels in cells from patients and controls, suggesting that mutant cryopyrin exerts its effect at a later step in IL-1 release.
The limitations of this study include sample size, differences in sex between patients and controls, and use of mixed PBMCs instead of monocytes. Sample size was limited by the number of available local patients and controls, as fresh blood samples are necessary for these types of studies. We made a significant attempt to match age of patients and controls by choosing spouses and siblings. Unfortunately, the number of available FCAS-affected males and unaffected females was limited in this study. However, we believe that differences in IL-1
responses due to sex are unlikely, given our previous unpublished data of healthy subjects in which IL-1
release from whole blood in response to 5 ng/ml LPS did not significantly differ between male and female subjects: males = 403.1 ± 201.5 pg/ml (n = 16); females = 403.3 ± 212.1 pg/ml (n = 3) (mean ± SD). We chose to use PBMCs instead of monocytes in this study because of the limited amount of blood available by venipuncture and the large number of conditions required to study the LPS dose response at two time points. Minimal amounts of the cytokines measured in this study are released by cells other than monocytes.
The finding of altered IL-1
secretion in PBMCs from FCAS patients is consistent with studies reported previously using monocytes or whole blood from single NOMID (2, 10) and MWS (8) patients. However, our results in FCAS differ from the previous results in MWS and NOMID in that no constitutive pro-IL-1
biosynthesis or IL-1
release was observed in any of the eight FCAS patients studied. This difference may be a reflection or even a contributing factor to the less severe and persistent nature of FCAS relative to MWS or NOMID. It is possible that FCAS cells have constitutively active ICE/caspase-1, and that the lack of IL-1
release at baseline is due to the absence of pro-IL-1
. It is also possible that increased pro-IL-1
biosynthesis seen in monocytes from a NOMID patient was due to IL-1R-mediated NF-
B activation. Like monocytes from a MWS and one NOMID patient, the FCAS cells showed increased IL-1
release with LPS. There are clear differences in IL-1
release between patients and controls at low LPS doses at both 4 and 24 h, suggesting a state of hyperresponsiveness. We did observe some differences in IL-1
responses between individual FCAS patients, but the lack of significant variation in clinical severity among these patients and the limited number of patients with different mutations did not allow for adequate power to study this. It seems likely that the differences between monocyte IL-1
responses among the cryopyrin-associated diseases correlate with clinical phenotype; however, additional studies with larger numbers of NOMID, MWS, and FCAS patients with additional mutations need to be performed to confirm this.
Although the exact role of cryopyrin in the activation of ICE/caspase-1 has not been determined, our data clearly show that FCAS mutations in cryopyrin result in enhanced processing and release of the ICE/caspase-1-dependent cytokines, IL-1
and IL-18, in the presence of LPS. VX-765, via its active metabolite VRT-043198, inhibited LPS-induced IL-1
and IL-18 release by PBMCs from FCAS patient and healthy volunteers with very similar efficacy and potency. Therefore, cryopyrin mutations do not alter the ability of VX-765 to interact with and inhibit ICE/caspase-1. The effectiveness of the orally active ICE/caspase-1 inhibitor, VX-765, in this ex vivo model supports the testing of this agent in autoinflammatory disorders.
| Acknowledgments |
|---|
| Disclosures |
|---|
|
|
|---|
| Footnotes |
|---|
1 Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. Kevin Beaumont, Vertex Pharmaceuticals, 11010 Torreyana Road, San Diego, CA 92121. E-mail address: Kevin_Beaumont{at}sd.vrtx.com ![]()
2 Abbreviations used in this paper: FCAS, familial cold autoinflammatory syndrome; ICE, IL-converting enzyme; MWS, Muckle-Wells syndrome; NBS, nucleotide binding site; NOMID, neonatal onset multisystem inflammatory disease; ASC, apoptosis-associated speck-like protein containing a CARD. ![]()
Received for publication March 15, 2005. Accepted for publication May 30, 2005.
| References |
|---|
|
|
|---|
-processing inflammasome with increased activity in Muckle-Wells autoinflammatory disorder. Immunity 20: 319-325. [Medline]
and interleukin-18 release in a patient with chronic infantile neurologic, cutaneous, articular syndrome. Arthritis Rheum. 50: 3329-3333. [Medline]
converting enzyme. Science 267: 2000-203.
secretion in monocytic cells: enhanced activity of disease-associated mutants and requirement for ASC. J. Biol. Chem. 279: 21924-21928. This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
D. Zoukhri, S. Ko, P. C. Stark, and C. L. Kublin Roles of Caspase 1 and Extracellular Signal-Regulated Kinase in Inflammation-Induced Inhibition of Lacrimal Gland Protein Secretion Invest. Ophthalmol. Vis. Sci., October 1, 2008; 49(10): 4392 - 4398. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
H. Watanabe, S. Gehrke, E. Contassot, S. Roques, J. Tschopp, P. S. Friedmann, L. E. French, and O. Gaide Danger Signaling through the Inflammasome Acts as a Master Switch between Tolerance and Sensitization J. Immunol., May 1, 2008; 180(9): 5826 - 5832. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
M. Sanchez-Alavez and T. Bartfai It all happens between Toll receptors and Caspase 1 PNAS, May 8, 2007; 104(19): 7733 - 7734. [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
W. Wannamaker, R. Davies, M. Namchuk, J. Pollard, P. Ford, G. Ku, C. Decker, P. Charifson, P. Weber, U. A. Germann, et al. (S)-1-((S)-2-{[1-(4-Amino-3-chloro-phenyl)-methanoyl]-amino}-3,3-dimethyl-butanoyl)-pyrrolidine-2-carboxylic acid ((2R,3S)-2-ethoxy-5-oxo-tetrahydro-furan-3-yl)-amide (VX-765), an Orally Available Selective Interleukin (IL)-Converting Enzyme/Caspase-1 Inhibitor, Exhibits Potent Anti-Inflammatory Activities by Inhibiting the Release of IL-1beta and IL-18 J. Pharmacol. Exp. Ther., May 1, 2007; 321(2): 509 - 516. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
Y. Jin, C. M. Mailloux, K. Gowan, S. L. Riccardi, G. LaBerge, D. C. Bennett, P. R. Fain, and R. A. Spritz NALP1 in Vitiligo-Associated Multiple Autoimmune Disease N. Engl. J. Med., March 22, 2007; 356(12): 1216 - 1225. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
K. S. Leslie, H. J. Lachmann, E. Bruning, J. A. McGrath, A. Bybee, J. R. Gallimore, P. F. Roberts, P. Woo, C. E. Grattan, and P. N. Hawkins Phenotype, Genotype, and Sustained Response to Anakinra in 22 Patients With Autoinflammatory Disease Associated With CIAS-1/NALP3 Mutations Arch Dermatol, December 1, 2006; 142(12): 1591 - 1597. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
A. Nadiri, M. K. Wolinski, and M. Saleh The Inflammatory Caspases: Key Players in the Host Response to Pathogenic Invasion and Sepsis J. Immunol., October 1, 2006; 177(7): 4239 - 4245. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
F. S. Sutterwala, Y. Ogura, D. S. Zamboni, C. R. Roy, and R. A. Flavell NALP3: a key player in caspase-1 activation Innate Immunity, August 1, 2006; 12(4): 251 - 256. [Abstract] [PDF] |
||||
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| HOME | HELP | FEEDBACK | SUBSCRIPTIONS | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |