| Literature DB >> 28972558 |
Yoav Gal1, Ohad Mazor2, Reut Falach3, Anita Sapoznikov4, Chanoch Kronman5, Tamar Sabo6.
Abstract
Ricin, a plant-derived toxin originating from the seeds of Ricinus communis (castor beans), is one of the most lethal toxins known, particularly if inhaled. Ricin is considered a potential biological threat agent due to its high availability and ease of production. The clinical manifestation of pulmonary ricin intoxication in animal models is closely related to acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), which involves pulmonary proinflammatory cytokine upregulation, massive neutrophil infiltration and severe edema. Currently, the only post-exposure measure that is effective against pulmonary ricinosis at clinically relevant time-points following intoxication in pre-clinical studies is passive immunization with anti-ricin neutralizing antibodies. The efficacy of this antitoxin treatment depends on antibody affinity and the time of treatment initiation within a limited therapeutic time window. Small-molecule compounds that interfere directly with the toxin or inhibit its intracellular trafficking may also be beneficial against ricinosis. Another approach relies on the co-administration of antitoxin antibodies with immunomodulatory drugs, thereby neutralizing the toxin while attenuating lung injury. Immunomodulators and other pharmacological-based treatment options should be tailored according to the particular pathogenesis pathways of pulmonary ricinosis. This review focuses on the current treatment options for pulmonary ricin intoxication using anti-ricin antibodies, disease-modifying countermeasures, anti-ricin small molecules and their various combinations.Entities:
Keywords: anti-ricin small molecules; antitoxins; countermeasures; disease-modifying agents; pulmonary intoxication; ricin
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28972558 PMCID: PMC5666358 DOI: 10.3390/toxins9100311
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Toxins (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6651 Impact factor: 4.546
Figure 1Ricin-induced activation of cell signaling pathways and downstream formation of damage mediators. (1) The ribotoxic stress response characterized by MAP3K (PKR and ZAK) activation of MAPK (p38 and JNK) signaling; (2) The nuclear factor kappa B pathway, which is activated upon IкK-induced IкB phosphorylation and degradation; (3) NALP3 inflammasome-mediated IL-1β activation; (4) Apoptotic cell death attributed to pro-apoptotic caspase activation; (5) Proinflammatory cytokines and damage mediators released upon activation of the various signal transduction pathways activated by ricin.
Monoclonal antibodies shown to be protective against ricin when administered post-exposure.
| Antibody Name | Antibody Type | Target | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| RAC18 | murine; chimeric | RTA | [ |
| PB10 | chimeric | [ | |
| RA36 | murine | [ | |
| 43RCA-G1 | humanized | [ | |
| GD12 | murine; chimeric | [ | |
| MH1 | chimeric | [ | |
| MH36 | chimeric | [ | |
| JB4 | chimeric | RTB | [ |
| RB34 | murine | [ | |
| RB37 | murine | [ | |
| D9 | murine; humanized | [ | |
| MH2 | chimeric | [ | |
| MH73 | chimeric | [ | |
| MH75 | chimeric | [ | |
| MH77 | chimeric | [ |
Summary of disease-modifying countermeasures.
| Pathway | Target | Inhibitors |
|---|---|---|
| Proinflammatory cytokines | IL-1β | anakinra, immunomodulators |
| TNFα | anti-TNFα agents, immunomodulators | |
| IL-6 | tocilizumab, immunomodulators | |
| Damage mediators | XO | allopurinol, febuxostat, antioxidants |
| sPLA2 | Mepacrine | |
| ET-1 | bosentan, tezosentan | |
| MMP-9 | Doxycycline | |
| VEGF | bevacizumab, aflibercept | |
| NFкB pathway | NFкB | NFкB inhibitors, ‘Compound A’ |
| IKK | IкK inhibitors, auranofin, BMS-345541 | |
| MAP3K | PKR | 2-AP, C16, imoxine, PKRi |
| ZAK | sorafenib, nilotinib, DHP-2 | |
| MAPK | p38 | PW66, UM101, p38 inhibitors |
| JNK | PW66, SP600125, JNK inhibitors | |
| NALP3 inflammasome | NALP3 inflammasome | MCC950, parthenolide, glyburide, BHB, isoliquiritigenen |
| IL-1β | Anakinra | |
| Apoptosis | Apoptosis | antioxidants, zinc, apoptosis inhibitors |
| caspases 3, 6, 7, 9 | PW69, bithionol |
Figure 2Cellular targets for anti-ricin small molecule compound-based treatment. (1) Receptor mimicry; (2) Blockers of endocytosis; (3–5) Retrograde trafficking blockers; (6) Active-site inhibitors. TGN: trans-Golgi network; ER: endoplasmic reticulum.
Small molecule anti-ricin inhibitors-mechanisms and targets.
| Mechanism | Cell Target | Inhibitors |
|---|---|---|
| Receptor mimicry | RTB | Derivatives of glycosphingolipids, lactose and galactose |
| Endocytosis blockers | Early endosome | NaN3, cytochalasin D, colchicine |
| Endosome | ||
| Trafficking blockers | TGN | Retro-2, DA2MT, atorvastatin, brefeldin A, mansonone D |
| ER | benzyl alcohol, 3′-Azido-3′-Deoxythimidine | |
| Reductive activation inhibitors | PDI, TrxR, TMX, | auranofin, bacitracin |
| glutathione disulfide oxidoreductase | ||
| Active site and RTA inhibitors | Ribosomes | purine- pterin- and pyrimidine-based inhibitors, 4-fluorophenyl methyl 2-(furan-2-yl)quinolone-4-carboxylate, difluoromethylornithine, aptamers, RIP-α-sarcin/ricin loop interface blockers, baicalin |