| Literature DB >> 25601863 |
Timo Rath1, Kristi Baker2, Michal Pyzik2, Richard S Blumberg3.
Abstract
As a single receptor, the neonatal Fc receptor (FcRn) is critically involved in regulating albumin and IgG serum concentrations by protecting these two ligands from degradation. In addition to these essential homeostatic functions, FcRn possesses important functions in regulating immune responses that are equally as critical and are increasingly coming to attention. During the first stages of life, FcRn mediates the passive transfer of IgG across the maternal placenta or neonatal intestinal walls of mammals, thereby conferring passive immunity to the offspring before and after birth. In fact, FcRn is one of the very few molecules that are known to move from luminal to serosal membranes of polarized cells that form epithelial barriers of the lung and intestines. Together with FcRn's recently explored critical role in eliciting MHC II presentation and MHC class I cross-presentation of IgG-complexed antigen, this renders FcRn capable of exerting broad and potent functions in regulating immune responses and immunosurveillance at mucosal sites. Further, it is now clear that FcRn dependent mucosal absorption of therapeutic molecules is a clinically feasible and potent novel route of non-invasive drug delivery, and the interaction between FcRn and IgG has also been utilized for the acquisition of humoral immunity at mucosal sites. In this review, we begin by briefly summarizing the basic knowledge on FcRn expression and IgG binding, then describe more recent discoveries pertaining to the mechanisms by which FcRn orchestrates IgG related mucosal immune responses and immunosurveillance at host-environment interfaces within the adult organism. Finally, we outline how the knowledge of actions of FcRn at mucosal boundaries can be capitalized for the development and engineering of powerful mucosal vaccination strategies and novel routes for the non-invasive delivery of Fc-based therapeutics.Entities:
Keywords: albumin; antigen presentation; immunoglobulin G; mucosal immunology; neonatal Fc receptor
Year: 2015 PMID: 25601863 PMCID: PMC4283642 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2014.00664
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1FcRn-mediated functions in immune surveillance and homeostasis at the intestinal epithelial barrier (. FcRn within enterocytes can transport IgG from the systemic circulation across the epithelial barrier into the intestinal lumen (I.). Upon formation of immune complexes (ICs) consisting of bacteria and anti-bacterial IgG within the intestinal lumen, FcRn can transcytose these back into the LP (II.). In the LP, the ICs are delivered to antigen-presenting cells (APCs) from which the ICs are taken up via canonical FcγR’s. Once internalized into the cell, the ICs are then directed into acidic endosomes, in which FcRn is operative to mediate the presentation of IC derived antigen to antigen-specific T-cells (III.).
Therapeutic applications and opportunities derived from FcRn-based biology.
| FcRn-based therapeutic approaches | Mode of action | Therapeutic use | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Respiratory epithelium | Transcytosis of IgG across respiratory epithelium | Non-invasive pulmonary delivery of IgG-based therapeutics in non-human primates and humans | ( |
| Vaccination against respiratory pathogens | |||
| Intestinal epithelium | Transcytosis of IgG across intestinal epithelium | Providing passive and active immunity against enteric pathogens and infections | ( |
| Transepithelial transport of Fc-targeted nanoparticles | Enabling drugs currently limited by low bioavailability to be efficiently delivered through oral administration | ||
| Genitourinary epithelium | Transcytosis of IgG across genitourinary epithelium | Providing passive and active immunity against infections with genitourinary entrance | ( |
| Placenta | Transcytosis of IgG across the placenta from mother to fetus | Providing passive immunity to fetus | ( |
| Transplacental delivery of IgG-based therapeutics | |||
| Extending serum half-life of IgG and IgG-based therapeutics by augmenting FcRn interactions | Increasing FcRn binding with selective mutations within the IgG Fc fragment that enable pH-dependent binding of IgG | Increasing bioavailability of IgG- and IgG-based therapeutics in serum and tissue, effectiveness shown for | ( |
| Prolonging factor VIII and IX serum half-life for hemophilia treatment | |||
| Enhanced anti-tumor activity | |||
| Protection against (S)HIV | |||
| Increasing FcRn binding to multimeric IgG containing immune complexes | Increasing and inducing MHC I and MHC II antigen presentation | ( | |
| Increasing and inducing antigen-specific T-cell responses | |||
| Relevance and effectiveness shown for | |||
| Tumor protection at mucosal sites (intestines, lung) | |||
| Vaccination with tumor antigen for increased anti-tumor surveillance | |||
| Reducing serum half-life of IgG- and IgG-based therapeutics | IVIG effect and saturating FcRn binding | Amelioration of IgG-mediated diseases such as Immune thrombocytopenic purpura Myasthenia gravis | ( |
| Peptide mimetics or anti-FcRn antibodies that block IgG binding | |||
| Engineered antibodies with higher FcRn affinity that enhance IgG degradation ( | |||
| Colitis | |||
| Arthritis | |||
| Pemphigus vulgaris | |||
| Autoimmune encephalomyelitis | |||
| Lupus nephritis | |||