| Literature DB >> 31485194 |
Benoit Le Goff1,2, Béatrice Bouvard3,4, Thierry Lequerre5, Eric Lespessailles6, Hubert Marotte7,8, Yves-Marie Pers9,10, Bernard Cortet11.
Abstract
Proinflammatory cytokines play an important role in the systemic and focal bone loss associated with chronic inflammatory diseases. Targeting these cytokines with biologics and small molecules has led to a major improvement of the bone health of patients with inflammatory arthritis. Cytokines from the IL-17 family have been shown to be involved in the pathogenesis of several diseases such as spondyloarthritis, psoriatic arthritis, or psoriasis. IL-17A has been the first described and the most studied. The recent development of targeted therapies against IL-17A or its receptor and their efficacy has confirmed the importance of this cytokine in the development of inflammatory diseases. The aim of this review was to describe the effects of the IL-17 family and more particularly of IL-17A on bone and cartilage tissues. At the cellular level, IL-17A is proosteoclastogenic whereas its effects on osteoblasts depend on the stage of differentiation of these cells. In vivo, IL-17A is not required for normal bone homeostasis but plays an important role in bone loss notably in an ovariectomized mouse model of osteoporosis. Preliminary data from clinical trials showed a stabilisation of bone density in patients treated with anti-IL-17A antibodies. IL-17A plays a central role in the cartilage damage through the induction of collagenases and by decreasing the expression of their inhibitors in synergy with the other proinflammatory cytokines. The prevention of structural damage by anti-IL-17A therapies has been demonstrated in several pivotal clinical trials. Overall, blocking the IL-17A pathway seems to have a positive effect on the bone and cartilage damage observed in inflammatory arthritis. Differences and specificity of these effects compared to those already described with other biologics such as anti-TNF therapies remain to be explored.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31485194 PMCID: PMC6710740 DOI: 10.1155/2019/8659302
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mediators Inflamm ISSN: 0962-9351 Impact factor: 4.711
Summary of the main findings of IL-17 implication in bone loss and structural damage in animal models.
| References | Animal | Animal model | Treatment/intervention | Main results |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | IL-17A−/− mice | NA | IL-17A−/− mice have physiological bone homeostasis indistinguishable from Wnt mice | |
| [ | IL-17 overexpression | Systemic recombinant minicircle injection | Peripheral joint destruction without joint inflammation but some psoriasis | |
| IL-17 overexpression | Collagen-induced arthritis | Systemic recombinant minicircle injection | IL-17A exacerbates synovial inflammation and bone loss in inflammatory arthritis | |
| [ | IL-17RA−/− mice | Ovariectomy | NA | Protected against bone loss |
| [ | Adult Balb/c mice | Ovariectomy | Anti-IL-17 antibody | Prevented the bone loss phenotypes |
| [ | Adult Balb/c mice | Ovariectomy | Anti-IL-17, anti-TNF, and anti-RANK-L antibodies | Cortical bone parameters, bone biomechanical properties, and histomorphometry were best preserved by anti-IL-17 antibody |
| [ | Balb/c mice | Defects in middiaphysis region of femur | Anti-IL-17 antibody | Improvement of bone healing by recruitment of osteoprogenitors at the injury site |
| [ | Sprague-Dawley rats | Critical-sized defects in the calvaria | Defects were filled with IL-17 | IL-17 significantly inhibited the filling of calvarial defects |
| [ | DBA/1 mice | Collagen-induced arthritis | Adenoviral IL-17 injected in the knee joint | Accelerated the onset and aggravated the synovial inflammation at the site, enhanced osteoclastic activity |
| [ | DBA/1 mice | Collagen-induced arthritis | IL-17-deficient allogeneic bone marrow transplantation | Decreased arthritis severity associated with increased functionally suppressive Tregs and reduced levels of other Th17-lineage inflammatory cytokines |
| [ | DBA/1 mice | Collagen-induced arthritis | Anti-IL-17 antibody | Treatment even after the onset of CIA significantly reduced the severity of CIA and suppressed joint damage |