4.2 Article

From supernatants to cytokines: a personal view on the early history of IL-1, IL-1Ra, TNF and its inhibitor in rheumatology

Journal

ARTHRITIS RESEARCH & THERAPY
Volume 20, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

BIOMED CENTRAL LTD
DOI: 10.1186/s13075-018-1607-y

Keywords

Rheumatoid arthritis; Auto-inflammatory diseases; Collagenase; Mononuclear cell factor; IL-1; IL-1Ra; Tumour necrosis factor; TNF inhibitors

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Long-term cell cultures developed early in the twentieth century allowed identification in their supernatants of biological mediators subsequently defined as migration factors, interferons, lymphokines, monokines, cytokines and interleukins. In rheumatology, early in the 1930s, synovial cell cultures revealed two major distinct populations, i.e. synovial fibroblasts and monocyte-macrophages. Discovery of the interstitial collagenase (MMP-1) and its role in tissue destruction, such as in rheumatoid arthritis (RA), raised the question of the cellular source for this enzyme. My personal interest in the field was driven by the lack of understanding for the link between tissue destruction and immunology. This triggered our seminal contribution to the field, establishing in 1976-79 at the Arthritis Unit (Massachusetts General Hospital, with SM Krane) that a mononuclear factor (MCF, around 15 kDa) produced by stimulated macrophage, under direct contact with activated T cells, induced large amounts of collagenase and prostaglandin E-2 (PGE(2), a bone resorbing agent) in human synovial fibroblasts from RA patients. Our original MCF biological observations preceded cloning, and recombinant IL-1 beta confirmed the biological activity of the purified natural IL-1. Following my return to Geneva in 1980 and searching for a high level of IL-1 in urine and serum of patients with high fever or Still's disease, to our surprise-a finding of absence-we found that IL-1 was masked by a factor of approximately 17 kDa and first presented this in 1984 at the Fourth International Lymphokine Workshop. In 1987, before IL-Ra cloning, my co-worker P Seckinger and I demonstrated first-time observation in cytokine biology that the mechanism was due to the inhibition of IL-1 binding the cell surface receptor, leading to the concept of IL-1 receptor antagonist (IL-1Ra). Having reported in 1985 that TNF/cachectin also induced collagenase and PGE(2) in human synovial cells, we found that IL-1Ra did not block TNF-alpha but was due to another inhibitor. As other investigators, we confirmed that this inhibitory factor was a soluble TNF receptor. The years between the 1970s and 1990s were probably the most exciting period in the field of cytokines and cytokine antagonists; it gave rise to two concepts in the cytokine field-one of the receptor antagonist, and the other of soluble receptor antagonists.

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