Title: MECHANISMS IN INFLAMMATION:
1MECHANISMS IN INFLAMMATION A common thread in
diverse diseases
David J. Grainger, Ph.D. British Heart Foundation
Senior Research Fellow Department of Medicine,
Cambridge University
What do the following diseases have in common?
Coronary heart Disease Osteoporosis
Asthma Severe non-fatal RTA trauma
Multiple Sclerosis Alzheimers Disease
Inflammation is a key pathogenic component in all
of them, and anti-inflammatory medicines have the
potential to reduce or abolish the symptoms
2 What is inflammation?
Normal Lung
Bacterial sepsis
Recruitment of white blood cells
3Red blood cell
Numerous Oxygen transporters
White blood cell
Rarer Various different kinds Major
effectors of the immune system Also called
LEUKOCYTES
Picture of blood
x800
Picture of neutrophil
This leukocyte is engulfing snd killing bacteria,
a process called PHAGOCYTOSIS. This is the major
mechanism that protects you from infection.
x11,750
Images taken from Functional Histology
Churchill Livingston 1979 with permission
4 The leukocyte army
LEUKOCYTES
MONONUCLEAR CELLS
GRANULOCYTES
50
50
LYMPHOCYTES
MONOCYTES
NEUTROPHILS
EOSINOPHILS
BASOPHILS
B CELL
T CELL
macrophages
Mast cells
20
20
10
45
5
5 The Mission
- Detect invasion
- Identify sites of infection
- Identify sites of tissue damage and other sites
at high risk of becoming infected - Differentiate enemies from friends
- Destroy invaders
- Engulf them
- Kill them
- Precipitate them
6 The Mission
- Detect invasion
- Identify sites of infection
- Identify sites of tissue damage and other sites
at high risk of becoming infected - Differentiate enemies from friends
- Destroy invaders
- Engulf them
- Kill them
- Precipitate them
- 3. Organise and co-ordinate (logistics and HQ)
7MONOCYTES/MACROPHAGES
Patrol every tissue in the body Particularly
common in mucosal frontline Part of the
innate immune system Detect invaders
primarily using PAMPs Respond by raising the
alarm, releasing many pro-inflammatory
cytokines Direct phagocytosis function to
eliminate enemy forward guard Soon overwhelmed
by a decent attack Phagocytosis function
crucial for clearing debris following tissue
damage Clear up after the battle is won Also
function as antigen presenting cells (APC)
8BASOPHILS/MAST CELLS
Patrol mucosal tissues Part of the innate
immune system Detect invaders primarily using
PAMPs Respond by raising the alarm, primarily
by releasing histamine and IgEs Major
response to non-living invaders (bee stings,
peptides, proteins, tissue damage, heat etc).
Limited capacity to directly deal with enemy
9NEUTROPHILS/EOSINOPHILS
- Fast response foot soldiers - respond in
hours - Attracted to sites of activated macrophages,
and also directly on tissue damage - Fearsome array of chemical weapons, primarily
free radical generators - Generate further pro-inflammatory signals
- Huge capacity to overwhelm even large
invasions - BUT major capacity for collateral damage!
10B CELLS
Antibody factories Key component of the
mammalian adaptive immune system Repeated
clonal selection produces high affinity
antibodies to any given antigen - but it take
days or even weeks if naive Memory cells
persist for years or decades, and provide an
accelerated response when antigen
re-encountered Antibodies come in various
flavours pentameric IgM dominates early low
affinity response, primarily for precipitin
action, then high affinity IgG labels take
over Require T cell and APC help
11T CELLS Killer T cells (CD8)
The special forces of the immune system Key
component of the mammalian adaptive immune
system Kill cells designated as non-self
following recognition by Helper T cells
Highly specific, tightly regulated killers, with
less capacity for collateral damage Form a
Membrane Attack Complex which permeabilises the
target cell and kills it in Requires T cell help
12T CELLS Helper T cells (CD4)
Multiple sub-classes now being identified Key
component of the mammalian adaptive immune
system Important role as the army generals,
co- ordinating the immune response Clonally
selected like B cells to react with particular
foreign antigens Required to initiate the
killing by the CD8 T cells Central role in
immunity illustrated by AIDS - CD4 T cells are
the major cell type wiped out by uncontrolled
HIV replication
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15- Macrophages process antigens and display them on
cell surface - Migrate through the lymphatic system to
secondary lymphoid organs - Present the antigen to naïve B and T cells
- Initiate B cell clonal selection and affinity
maturation - Selected B cells released into blood, and high
levels of specific antibody are produced
16- Initially IgM produced pentameric, low affinity
species with precipitin action - After a few days, high affinit IgG produced
- Marks out cells as enemies
- Most IgGs fix complement to directly kill the
target cell - Also cross-link receptors on T cells stimulating
further cytokine release, and T cell activation
17 SUMMARY
- Mast cells and macrophages are early warning
systems in the mucosa - Early recognition through PAMPs binding to TLRs
- Cytokines are produced which recruit other
leukocytes and establish local inflammatory
response - Neutrophils are usually the first responders,
coming within hours, often in large numbers - Neutrophils kill infectious agents primarily
through release of free radicals - Antigen from the invaders travels through
lymphatics to lymph nodes - Antigen is presented, by specialised
macrophages, to naïve T and B cells - Clonal selection of both T and B cells yields
ever increasing affinity of antibodies - Antibodies bind to infectious agents and
preciptate them, or fix complement to directly
kill them, or mediate recognition by T cells - Killer T cells bind to infectious agents and
kill them
18 Peace-time duties for the leukocyte army
- Clearance of cell debris, particularly apoptotic
cell corpses, by professional phagocytes - Osteoclasts are specialised monocyte-derived
macrophages responsible for bone resorption - Macrophages clear lipids deposited into tissues
CELLS OF THE IMMUNE SYSTEM HAVE BEEN CONSCRIPTED
TO PERFORM A WIDE RANGE OF FUNCTIONS OTHER THAN
HOST DEFENCE
19When does host defense turn into pathological
inflammation?
Crohns Disease
TOO MUCH WRONG PLACE WRONG TIME
ARDS
Multiple Sclerosis
Rheumatoid arthritis
Lupus
Heart disease
Tendonitis
20 ARDS
- Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome
- An example of a whole class of acute
inflammatory pathologies where an appropriate
inflammatory response to trauma or infection does
too much collateral damage (pancreatitis, sepsis,
gun-shot wounds, head trauma etc.) - Two major side-effects of the inflammation
- Acute edema due to vascular permeabilisation
- Fibrotic damage to sensitive structures (mainly
lung and kidney basement membranes - Often lethal
- No effective clinical management
21 Multiple Sclerosis
- An example of a whole class of autoimmune
disorders where the adaptive immune system fails
to distinguish self-antigens from enemies
(rheumatoid arthritis, lupus, Sjorgrens,
Scleroderma, type I diabetes, Graves, B12
resistance etc) - Cause unknown, but cross-reaction of antibodies
from bacterial superantigens to host proteins a
possibility - Two major side-effects of the autoimmune
reaction - Loss of specific tissue function due to
destruction of key cell types or neutralisation
of key proteins - Chronic, systemic pro-inflammatory status leading
to general tissue damage - No effective clinical management
22 Tendonitis
- An example of inflammation which was once
appropriate but which has continued for too long - Initiated in response to tissue damage
- Mechanisms responsible for switching off
inflammation (such as production of
anti-inflammatory cytokines like TGF-?) fail - Generally respond well to clinical management
with mild anti-inflammatory drugs - once the
cycle of activated leukocytes producing
pro-inflammatory cytokines has been broken, the
inflammation resolves
23 TREATING PATHOLOGICAL INFLAMMATION
24 TREATING PATHOLOGICAL INFLAMMATION
25 TREATING PATHOLOGICAL INFLAMMATION
THERE IS NO RIGHT LEVEL OF IMMUNE
SYSTEM ACTIVITY - IT DEPENDS ON THE CONTEXT
- Immunosuppression and anti-inflammatory
treatment are part of an continuum - Anti-inflammatories part of an integrated
clinical management package, including
anti-infectives etc. - Continual re-assessment of the costbenefit
balance needed for each patient - Current anti-inflammatory medicines (e.g.
corticosteroids) discriminate poorly between
desirable host defence and pathological
inflammation - Major unmet need for improved anti-inflammatory
therapies - More subtle control of leukocyte behaviour
- Smart drugs distinguishing physiological
immune function from pathological inflammation
26 TREATING PATHOLOGICAL INFLAMMATION
THERE IS NO RIGHT LEVEL OF IMMUNE
SYSTEM ACTIVITY - IT DEPENDS ON THE CONTEXT
- Immunosuppression and anti-inflammatory
treatment are part of an continuum - Anti-inflammatories part of an integrated
clinical management package, including
anti-infectives etc. - Continual re-assessment of the costbenefit
balance needed for each patient - Current anti-inflammatory medicines (e.g.
corticosteroids) discriminate poorly between
desirable host defence and pathological
inflammation - Major unmet need for improved anti-inflammatory
therapies - More subtle control of leukocyte behaviour
- Smart drugs distinguishing physiological
immune function from pathological inflammation
27 Two Broad Anti-Inflammatory Strategies
TARGET LEUKOCYTE ACTIVATION AND FUNCTION
- Stop leukocytes at the already at the site of
inflammation from doing collateral damage - Reduce vascular permeability and edema
- Inhibit fibrogenesis
TARGET LEUKOCYTE RECRUITMENT
- Stop being recruited to the site of inflammation
- If they are not there, they cannot do damage
28Tissue damage
Monocytes
Myeloperoxidase
Macrophages
TNF-a
Neutrophils
Chemokines M-CSF
Chemokines
Interleukins
TGF-b
Immunoglobulins
Host tissue
Chemokines Interleukins TGF-b
CD4 T-cells
TNF-a
B-cells
LPS Antigen
Interleukins
Histamines
Chemokines
CD8 T-cells
Mast cells
Pathogens
Eosinophils
29Tissue damage
Monocytes
Myeloperoxidase
Macrophages
TNF-a
Neutrophils
Chemokines M-CSF
Chemokines
Interleukins
TGF-b
Immunoglobulins
Host tissue
Chemokines Interleukins TGF-b
CD4 T-cells
TNF-a
B-cells
LPS Antigen
Interleukins
Histamines
Chemokines
CD8 T-cells
Mast cells
Pathogens
Eosinophils
30 CHEMOKINES
Superfamily of structurally-related, small
pro- inflammatory cytokines that direct leukocyte
traffic
CXC family
CC family
IL-8 Gro-a, -b and -g IP-10 I-TAC SDF-1a PF-4
MCP-1, -2, -3 and -4 MIP-1a, -1b, -3a and
-3b Eotaxin 1 and 2 RANTES TARC 6Ckine / SLC
CX3C family
C family
Fractalkine
Lymphotactin
A signalling network of more than 50 ligands and
20 receptors
31 CHEMOKINES DIRECT LEUKOCYTE TRAFFIC
From the bone marrow through the blood stream to
the periphery, chemokines guide various leukocyte
subsets to their targets. The redundant
chemokine signalling network provides sufficient
information density to accurately address many
leukocyte subsets simultaneously.
Chemokines have been implicated in the
inappropriate recruitment of leukocytes that
typifies diseases with an inflammatory
component CHEMOKINES ARE AN ATTRACTIVE TARGET FOR
NOVEL ANTI-INFLAMMATORY THERAPIES
32 CHEMOKINE INHIBITORS
- Receptor antagonists
- Specificity problems
- Redundancy
- Broad spectrum chemokine inhibitors
- Functional inhibitors
- Toxiocology?
BX471 AMD3100
IL-10 agonists Peptide 3
33 ALIGNMENT STRATEGY TO IDENTIFY CHEMOKINE
INHIBITORS
AQPDAINAPV TCCYNFTNRK ISVQRLASYR
RITSSKCPKE .. . .
. AQPDAVNAPL TCCYSFTSKM IPMSRLESYK
RITSSRCPKE AVIFKTIVAK EICADPKQKW VQDSMDHLDK
QTQTPKT . . . .
AVVFVTKLKR EVCADPKKEW VQTYIKNLDR NQMR...
PEPTIDE 1
PEPTIDE 2
human
mouse
PEPTIDE 3
Alignment of different chemokines from more than
10 species identified regions of homology across
the whole superfamily
34Our primary functional screen for in vitro BSCI
activity
TRANSWELL FILTER MIGRATION ASSAY
35 PROPERTIES OF PEPTIDE 3
The first broad-spectrum chemokine inhibitor
(BSCI)
- Sequence specific
- Effective against all chemokines tested, with
similar potency - Completely inhibits migration
- Not very potent
Reckless Grainger (1999) Biochem. J. 340803-10
36 MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY PROGRAM IDENTIFIED FOUR
STRUCTURALLY DISTINCT FAMILIES OF BSCIs
PEPTIDES
AMINO-GLUTARIMIDES
- NR58-3.14.3
- BIM 58171
- BIM 58189
YOHIMBAMIDES
AMINO-CAPROLACTAMS
- Olfoxamide
- BN 83250
- BN 83470
BN83470 most promising candidate for further
development
Grainger et al. (2005) Mini Rev. Med. Chem.
5825-32
37Proof of concept Inject bacterial endotoxin
into rat skin to elicit massive skin
inflammation. Does systemic pre-treatment with
BSCI reduce leukocyte recruitment?
WHITE SPOTS ARE LEUKOCYTES
Endotoxin - - BSCI
- -
Endotoxin plus BSCI
Endotoxin only
- Suppresses macrophages plus B- and T- cell
recruitment to MCP-1 - Additionally blocks neutrophil recruitment to
LPS - Markedly reduces pro-inflammatory cytokine
production
38Animal model
Rats are sensitised with an injection of
an
ovalbumin
i
.p. 21 days later,
animals are treated with
BSCI via the subcutaneous route, 24 hours prior
to further
intranasal challenge with ovalbumin.
Mac-1
CD4
OVA
Treat
active
inactive
active
inactive
MACROPHAGES
LYMPHOCYTES
39Animal model
Rats are sensitised with an injection of
an
ovalbumin
i
.p. 21 days later,
animals are treated with
BSCI via the subcutaneous route, 24 hours prior
to further
intranasal challenge with ovalbumin.
UNTREATED
BSCI
40 CHEMOKINE INHIBITORS
- BN83470 is an orally acting anti-inflammatory
agent - Efficacy data in 10 animal models of
inflammation - Active at 1µg/kg doses - equivalent to
corticosteroids - Excellent side effect profile
- Beginning Phase I trials in 2006
- Development programme in place for allergic
rhinitis, asthma, COPD - Other aminocaprolactam BSCIs being developed for
surgical adhesions, stroke and heart disease
41 BSCIs are SMART anti-inflammatory agents
BSCIs do not affect resting macrophage numbers in
bone liver, skin and brain even after 6 months
continuous treatment
42 SUMMARY
- Inflammation is normal, essential physiological
process - Pathological inflammation is too much of a good
thing - Improved anti-inflammatory strategies need to
discriminate between physiological host defence
and pathological inflammation (I.e. be SMART!) - Two major strategies are to block leukocyte
activation (e.g. COX-2 inhibitors) and to block
leukocyte recruitment (e.g. chemokine inhibitors) - Most new programmes target the soluble mediators
that communicate between leukocytes and
co-ordinate the immune system - Immune regulation is very complex, and at present
pragmatism beats theory - Improved anti-inflammatory treatments will likely
find utility in a very broad spectrum of diseases
43Digital copies of these slide presentations, as
well as supplementary material on many of the
topics covered, can be found at
www.graingerlab.org