Literature DB >> 9922215

Effects of chronic anti-interleukin-5 monoclonal antibody treatment in a murine model of pulmonary inflammation.

C G Garlisi1, T T Kung, P Wang, M Minnicozzi, S P Umland, R W Chapman, D Stelts, Y Crawley, A Falcone, J G Myers, H Jones, M M Billah, W Kreutner, R W Egan.   

Abstract

The maturation of eosinophils in bone marrow, their migration to pulmonary tissue, and their subsequent degranulation and release of toxic granule proteins contributes to the pathophysiology observed in asthma. Interleukin-5 (IL-5) is essential for these processes to occur. Therefore, much emphasis has been placed on attempts to inhibit the production or activity of IL-5 in order to attenuate the inflammatory aspect of asthma. In this report, the immunological consequences of long-term exposure to an antibody recognizing IL-5 (TRFK-5) were studied in a murine pulmonary inflammation model. A single dose of TRFK-5 (1 mg/ kg, intraperitoneally) reversibly inhibited antigen-dependent lung eosinophilia in mice for at least 12 wk and inhibited the release of eosinophils from bone marrow for at least 8 wk. Normal responses to aerosol challenge were attained after 24 wk. In mice treated acutely with antibody (2 h before challenge), 50% inhibition of pulmonary eosinophilia occurred when 0. 06 mg/kg TRFK-5 was administered (intraperitoneally; ED50), resulting in 230 ng/ml (IC50) in serum. In mice treated with one dose of TRFK-5 (1 mg/kg) and rested before challenge, the antibody exhibited a half-life of 2.4 wk. After 18 to 19 wk, antigen challenge-induced eosinophilia was inhibited by 50% and serum levels of TRFK-5 were 25 ng/ml. TRFK-5 remaining in mice 8 wk after a single injection of TRFK-5 was sufficient to inhibit at least 50% of the eosinophilia induced in blood 3 h after injection of recombinant murine IL-5 (10 microg/kg, intravenously). To assess the biologic effect of long-term exposure of mice to antibody, several parameters of immune-cell function were measured. Throughout the extended period of activity of TRFK-5 (>/= 12 wk) there were no gross effects on antigen-dependent increases in T-cell recruitment into bronchoalveolar fluid (BALF), in IL-4 and IL-5 steady-state mRNA levels in lung tissue, or in immunoglobulin E (IgE) and IgG levels in serum. There was a small increase in IL-5 steady-state mRNA production in TRFK-5-treated mice after 2 h or 2 wk, but this was not observed at other times examined. In untreated mice, IL-5 steady-state mRNA production in response to antigen challenge decreased > 6-fold with age, although at all time points there was an increase in mRNA levels following challenge. Therefore, at later times, 25 ng/ml rather than 230 ng/ml of TRFK-5 inhibited BALF eosinophilia, probably because of reduced IL-5 levels. Twenty-four weeks after treatment with TRFK-5, when challenge-induced eosinophilia was restored, there was an excess of CD4(+) T cells in BALF from challenged mice. However, these T cells had no measurable effects on other responses to challenge, including cytokine production, B-cell accumulation, and immunoglobulin production in serum. Thus, the biologic duration of TRFK-5 was several months, and its activity was due to the presence of antibody above a therapeutic threshold rather than to any profound effect on the immune system.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 9922215     DOI: 10.1165/ajrcmb.20.2.3327

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Respir Cell Mol Biol        ISSN: 1044-1549            Impact factor:   6.914


  17 in total

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Review 5.  Cytokine/anti-cytokine therapy - novel treatments for asthma?

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Review 8.  Emerging concepts and directed therapeutics for the management of asthma: regulating the regulators.

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Review 10.  The potential of biologics for the treatment of asthma.

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