4.8 Article

Receptor-gated IL-2 delivery by an anti-human IL-2 antibody activates regulatory T cells in three different species

Journal

SCIENCE TRANSLATIONAL MEDICINE
Volume 12, Issue 574, Pages -

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/scitranslmed.abb9283

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Swiss National Science Foundation [310030-172978]
  2. Hochspezialisierte Medizin Schwerpunkt Immunologie (HSM-2-Immunologie)
  3. Clinical Research Priority Program CYTIMM-Z of University of Zurich (UZH)
  4. Department of Immunology, UZH
  5. BPRC
  6. UZH Entrepreneur-Fellowship
  7. Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF) [310030_172978] Funding Source: Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF)

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Stimulation of regulatory T (T-reg) cells holds great promise for the treatment of autoimmune, chronic inflammatory, and certain metabolic diseases. Recent clinical trials with low-dose interleukin-2 (IL-2) to expand Treg cells led to beneficial results in autoimmunity, but IL-2 immunotherapy can activate both T-reg cells and pathogenic T cells. Use of IL-2 receptor alpha (IL-2R alpha, CD25)-biased IL-2/anti-IL-2 antibody complexes improves IL-2 selectivity for T-reg cells; however, the mechanism of action of such IL-2 complexes is incompletely understood, thus hampering their translation into clinical trials. Using a cell-based and dynamic IL-2R platform, we identified a particular anti-human IL-2 antibody, termed UFKA-20. When bound to UFKA-20, IL-2 failed to stimulate cells expressing IL-2R beta (CD122) and IL-2R gamma (CD132), unless these cells also expressed high amounts of CD25. CD25 allowed IL-2/UFKA-20 complexes to bind, and binding to CD25 in the presence of CD122 and CD132 was followed by rapid dissociation of UFKA-20 from IL-2, delivery of IL-2 to CD122 and CD132, and intracellular signaling. IL-2/UFKA-20 complexes efficiently and preferentially stimulated CD4(+) T-reg cells in freshly isolated human T cells ex vivo and in mice and rhesus macaques in vivo. The crystal structure of the IL-2/UFKA-20 complex demonstrated that UFKA-20 interfered with IL-2 binding to CD122 and, to a lesser extent, also CD25. Together, we translated CD25-biased IL-2 complexes from mice to nonhuman primates and extended our mechanistic understanding of how CD25-biasing anti-human IL-2 antibodies work, which paves the way to clinical trials of CD25-biased IL-2 complexes.

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