A Fusion Protein of the gp130 and Interleukin-6Ralpha Ligand-binding Domains Acts as a Potent Interleukin-6 Inhibitor*

Cécile Ancey, Andrea Küster, Serge Haan, Andreas Herrmann, Peter C. HeinrichDagger, and Gerhard Müller-NewenDagger

From the Institut für Biochemie, Universitätsklinikum Rheinisch-Westfälische Technische Hochschule Aachen, Pauwelsstrasse 30, 52057 Aachen, Germany

Received for publication, February 19, 2003, and in revised form, March 17, 2003

    ABSTRACT
TOP
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
REFERENCES

Interleukin (IL)-6 is involved in the maintenance and progression of several diseases such as multiple myeloma, rheumatoid arthritis, or osteoporosis. The present work aims at the development of an IL-6 inhibitor for the use in anti-cytokine therapies. The IL-6 receptor is composed of two different subunits, an alpha -subunit (IL-6Ralpha ) that binds IL-6 with low affinity and a beta -subunit (gp130) that binds the IL-6·IL-6Ralpha complex with high affinity and as a result triggers intracellular signaling. In its soluble form, gp130 is a natural antagonist that neutralizes IL-6·soluble IL-6Ralpha complexes. It was our strategy to appropriately fuse the two receptor subunit fragments involved in IL-6 receptor complex formation to bind IL-6 with high affinity and to antagonize its effects. The ligand-binding domains of gp130 (D1-D2-D3) and IL-6Ralpha (D2-D3) were connected using three different linkers. The resulting constructs were expressed in stably transfected insect cells and tested for their ability to inhibit IL-6 activity in several in vitro systems. All fusion proteins were strong inhibitors of IL-6 signaling and abrogated IL-6-induced phosphorylation of STAT3, proliferation of transfected Ba/F3 cells, and induction of acute-phase protein synthesis. As intended, the fused receptors were much more effective than the separately expressed soluble receptor proteins. The fusion protein strategy presented here can also be applied to other cytokines that signal via receptors composed of two different subunits to design new potent inhibitors for anti-cytokine therapies.

    INTRODUCTION
TOP
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
REFERENCES

Anti-cytokine therapies are aimed at the inhibition of a certain cytokine that is responsible for the maintenance of a disease. Different strategies have been used to neutralize cytokines in patients. Most effective has been the application of soluble cytokine receptors that consist solely of the ectodomain but lack the transmembrane and cytoplasmic regions. They bind the respective cytokine with high affinity and specificity as membrane-bound receptors do. In the treatment of chronic inflammatory diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis, the use of dimeric soluble tumor necrosis factor receptors for the neutralization of tumor necrosis factor has been a real breakthrough (1).

IL-61 is secreted by several cell types in response to various inflammatory stimuli. It is the major mediator of the acute-phase response of the liver and is involved in the coordination of inflammatory and immune responses at the site of inflammation (2). In several acute and chronic inflammatory diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis and inflammatory bowel diseases, in postmenopausal osteoporosis, but also in certain types of cancer, IL-6 levels are elevated and a causal role for IL-6 in disease progression has been suggested. In some cases inhibition of IL-6 activity by receptor antagonists or neutralizing antibodies has beneficial effects (3, 4).

IL-6 belongs to the family of hematopoietic cytokines (5). It is a member of the subfamily of IL-6-type cytokines (6) comprising IL-6, IL-11, ciliary neurotrophic factor, leukemia inhibitory factor, oncostatin M, cardiotrophin-1, and cardiotrophin-like cytokine. They all use the hematopoietic cytokine receptor gp130 as a common signal-transducing receptor subunit (7). As a result of receptor activation the transcription factor STAT3 becomes tyrosine-phosphorylated and translocates into the nucleus to induce target gene expression (8, 9).

Expression of gp130 is not sufficient for cells to become responsive to IL-6. They additionally have to express the cytokine specific alpha -receptor subunit IL-6Ralpha . This alpha -receptor is not involved in the initiation of the cytoplasmic signal transduction cascades but is essential for cytokine binding. Thus, activation of the receptor by IL-6 requires two steps: (i) low affinity IL-6 binding to IL-6Ralpha and (ii) subsequent recruitment of the complex of IL-6 and IL-6Ralpha to two gp130 molecules leading to the formation of a high affinity ternary complex (10).

Cells lacking IL-6Ralpha can be stimulated with the combination of IL-6 and soluble IL-6Ralpha (sIL-6Ralpha ) (10). In such a situation, IL-6 binds to sIL-6Ralpha in solution and the heterodimer of IL-6/sIL-6Ralpha activates membrane-bound gp130. Soluble gp130 (sgp130) alone acts as a relatively weak IL-6 antagonist (11). Most interestingly, the antagonizing activity of sgp130 is substantially increased by the presence of sIL-6Ralpha (12). Both sIL-6R (13, 14) and sgp130 (11, 12) are found in high concentrations in human blood (about 50 and 300 ng/ml, respectively). This pair of soluble receptors might act as a natural IL-6 inhibitor to limit systemic IL-6 responses (12).

Structurally, IL-6 belongs to the family of the alpha -helix-bundle cytokines. IL-6Ralpha as well as gp130 belong to the family of class I cytokine receptors (5). The extracellular regions of IL-6Ralpha and gp130 consist of three (D1-D3) (15) or six domains (D1-D6) (16), respectively. D2 and D3 of IL-6Ralpha are involved in IL-6 binding (17). The complex of IL-6 and IL-6Ralpha is bound by D1-D3 of gp130 (18). IL-6 contains three receptor-binding sites. Site I is occupied by D2-D3 of IL-6Ralpha , and sites II and III bind to D2-D3 and D1 of gp130, respectively (19-21). Based on the mutagenesis data and the recently solved structure of D1-D3 of gp130 bound to viral IL-6, which binds gp130 in the absence of any alpha -receptor, a reliable model of the IL-6·IL-6Ralpha ·gp130 ternary complex has been proposed (22).

Inhibition of IL-6 activity by the use of soluble receptors is challenging because of the bipartite nature of the IL-6 receptor. IL-6 alone does not bind to gp130. To be neutralized by sgp130, IL-6 must first bind to sIL-6Ralpha . A fusion protein of gp130 and sIL-6Ralpha would therefore guarantee that the agonistic complex of IL-6·sIL-6Ralpha is immediately neutralized. Only recently, due to the new structural data on the IL-6·receptor complex (22), a promising rational approach on how to design an IL-6-antagonist based on a fusion of sgp130 with sIL-6Ralpha became possible. In this study, we present a highly potent IL-6 antagonist consisting of the ligand-binding moieties of sgp130 and sIL-6Ralpha .

    EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
TOP
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
REFERENCES

Cloning of the Fusion Proteins-- A fragment corresponding to D2-D3 of IL-6Ralpha (Val110-Lys338) was amplified by PCR introducing a multiple cloning site (SmaI, NotI, MluI, NheI) with the sense primer and a ApaI site, a stop codon instead of Met331, and a BamHI site with the antisense primer. The product was cut with SmaI (Roche Diagnostic GmbH, Mannheim, Germany) and BamHI (MBI Fermentas GmbH, St. Leon-Rot, Germany) and cloned into pSVL-gp130 (D1-D3) (Met1-Pro326) digested with the same enzymes. Then three different linkers were added after digestion of the obtained chimeric construct with MluI (Promega, Madison, WI) and NheI (MBI Fermentas GmbH). The first linker (stalk-49) corresponding to the short extracellular membrane proximal part of IL-6Ralpha (Ala323-Val362) was produced by PCR. Its amino acid sequence is GSAAATRAEN EVSTPMQALT TNKDDDNILF RDSANATSLP VQDSSSVAS. The two other linkers were constructed with hybridized oligonucleotides. The 41 amino acids of AGS-41 are GSAAATRGSA GSGGSATGSG SAAGSGDSVA AGSGGGSGSA S. AGS-33 consists of the sequence GSAAATRGSA GSGGSATGSG SAAGSGDSVR RAS. A FLAG tag was added to the C terminus of all fusion proteins using hybridization of an oligonucleotide pair containing ApaI, XbaI, and BamHI restriction sites and a stop codon. The fusion protein constructs were subcloned into the pIB/v5-his vector (Invitrogen, Groningen, The Netherlands) cut with BamHI and HindIII (Roche Diagnostic GmbH) to express the protein in insect cells. The integrity of all constructs was verified by DNA sequencing.

Expression in Insect Cells-- High 5 (H5) cells cultured in Sf-900II medium (Invitrogen, Paisley, Scotland) were stably transfected with the empty pIB/v5-his vector or vectors containing the fusion protein constructs, using the CellFECTIN method (Invitrogen). Cell supernatants were harvested every 3 days, cleared by centrifugation, and stored at -20 °C until use.

Protein Precipitation-- The fusion proteins from cell supernatants were precipitated overnight at 4 °C with IL-6 covalently linked to CNBr-Sepharose (Amersham Biosciences AB, Uppsala, Sweden).

Western Blotting-- Proteins were separated by SDS-PAGE, transferred to polyvinylidene difluoride membranes (PALL, Dreieich, Germany), incubated with the antibodies as indicated in the figures, and processed for chemiluminescence detection (Amersham Biosciences AB). Antibodies used for protein detection were as follows: sIL-6Ralpha (Eurogentec, Philadelphia, PA), Tyr(P) STAT3 (New England Biolabs, Frankfurt, Germany), and STAT3 (Santa Cruz Biotechnology Inc., Santa Cruz, CA).

Purification of the Fusion Proteins-- 200-500 ml of H5 cell supernatants containing the respective fusion proteins were applied to an IL-6-Sepharose column (2 ml) at 4 °C. After rinsing with phosphate-buffered saline, proteins were eluted with 6 ml of 2 M MgCl2. The eluate was dialyzed against phosphate-buffered saline or cell culture medium, and subsequently the amounts of fusion proteins were measured by ELISA.

Quantification of Fusion Proteins by ELISA-- An ELISA procedure was performed as described previously (12), using 0.3 µg/well of FLAG monoclonal antibody (Sigma) for coating and 50 ng/well of biotinylated monoclonal antibody B-T2 (DIACLONE, Besançon, France) as secondary antibody. The standard curve was obtained by 2-fold serial dilutions of sgp130-FLAG expressed in COS-7 cells and calibrated by sgp130 ELISA (12).

Ba/F3 Proliferation Assay-- Stably transfected Ba/F3-gp130-IL6R and Ba/F3-gp130-IL11R cells were cultured in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium containing 10% fetal calf serum, seeded on 96-well plates (20,000 cells/well), and stimulated with IL-6 (0.9 ng/ml) or trx-IL-11 (5 ng/ml) prepared as described previously (23) in the presence of purified fp stalk-49 (500 ng/ml first concentration) or purified mock-vector-transfected cell supernatant. After 60 h of incubation, metabolically active cells were quantified using a colorimetric assay based on the cell proliferation kit II XTT assay (Roche Diagnostic GmbH).

Induction of Acute-phase Protein Synthesis in HepG2 Cells-- alpha 1-Anti-chymotrypsin synthesized by HepG2 cells was measured by immunoprecipitation of radioactively labeled protein as described previously (12).

    RESULTS
TOP
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
REFERENCES

Rational Design of a Fusion Protein of sgp130 and sIL-6Ralpha as a Potential IL-6 Inhibitor-- The fusion protein was designed to contain the minimal regions of IL-6Ralpha and gp130 required for high affinity IL-6 binding. Moreover, the N terminus of mature gp130 should not be affected by the fusion, since it is important for ligand binding (24). Thus, the fusion protein consists of domains D1-D2-D3 of gp130 (including the signal sequence at the N terminus that directs its secretion) followed by a linker and domains D2 and D3 of IL-6Ralpha (Fig. 1A, upper scheme). The two receptor fragments have to be connected by the linker in a way that allows the fusion protein to adopt the conformation required for efficient neutralization of IL-6. According to the ternary complex model based on the x-ray structure of viral IL-6 bound to D1-D3 of gp130 (22), the C terminus of gp130-D3 and the N terminus of sIL-6Ralpha -D2 are separated by at least 8 nm. This distance can be bridged by a peptide linker of about 30-40 amino acids (Fig. 1A, lower part). The linker should be of high conformational flexibility, of low immunogenicity, and resistant to protease degradation. Three fusion proteins containing different linkers were constructed. Two of them, AGS-33 and AGS-41, are made of flexible Ala-, Gly-, and Ser-rich peptides of 33 and 41 amino acids, respectively. In an extended conformation these linkers span from about 10 (AGS-33) to 12 nm (AGS-41). The third one (fp stalk-49) consists of a short flexible fragment of the extracellular membrane-proximal part of IL-6Ralpha (25). Besides its flexibility, this linker is expected to be of low immunogenicity, since it is derived from the endogenous IL-6Ralpha . For technical reasons, a FLAG tag epitope was added at the C termini of all constructs (Fig. 1A, upper scheme).


View larger version (26K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Fig. 1.   Design and characterization of sgp130/sIL-6Ralpha fusion proteins. A: upper panel, schematic representation of the fusion protein fp AGS-33. Numbers refer to the amino acid positions in the fusion protein as indicated. Lower panel, structural model of IL-6 (yellow) bound to a fusion protein of sgp130 D1-D3 (green) and sIL-6Ralpha D2-D3 (blue). The gp130 and IL-6 part correspond to the solved structure of viral IL-6 bound to gp130 D1-D3 (22). IL-6Ralpha D2-D3 is adopted from the recently solved structure of sIL-6Ralpha (25). The linker (red) contains 33 amino acids as in fp AGS-33. Domain D1 of gp130 is involved in dimerization of the depicted ternary complex, leading to a stable hexameric complex (not shown). B, 5 ml of supernatants from insect cells stably transfected with expression vectors encoding the fusion proteins or mock-vector (control) were incubated with IL-6-Sepharose. Sepharose-bound proteins were analyzed by immunoblotting using a polyclonal sIL-6Ralpha antibody. C, purification of fp stalk-49 from insect cell supernatant by IL-6 affinity chromatography. 200 ml of supernatant from insect cells expressing fp stalk-49 were loaded onto a 2-ml IL-6-Sepharose column. Bound proteins were eluted with 10 ml of 2 M MgCl2, and 2 ml fractions were collected. The fusion protein from 10 ml of supernatant (sn), 10 ml of the fractions of the flow-through after 100, 150, and 200 ml, and from 1.5 ml of the 2-ml fractions of the eluates were precipitated and analyzed by immunoblotting using a polyclonal sIL-6Ralpha antibody. The indicated concentrations of fp stalk-49 were determined by ELISA.

Purification and Characterization of Fusion Proteins Produced in Insect Cells-- For continuous production of the fusion proteins stably transfected H5 insect cell lines were generated. The fusion proteins were precipitated from cell supernatants with IL-6-Sepharose and analyzed by Western blotting (Fig. 1B). The apparent molecular masses of the fusion proteins are 83.5 kDa for fp stalk-49, 69.5 kDa for fp AGS-33, and 72 kDa for fp AGS-41. The substantially higher molecular mass of fp stalk-49 is most likely due to an additional N-glycosylation site (Asn-Ala-Thr) introduced with the linker.

We took advantage of the affinity of the fusion proteins to IL-6 for their purification and concentration with IL-6-Sepharose. The insect cell supernatant, the flow-through and the eluate of IL-6 affinity chromatography were analyzed for the presence of fusion protein by Western blotting (Fig. 1C). Compared with the supernatant (sn, left lane), the fusion protein is strongly enriched in the eluate. No fusion protein is detectable in the flow-through fractions. The concentrations of fusion protein in the fractions determined by a newly developed ELISA correlate well with the intensities of the bands in the Western blot (Fig. 1C). After dialysis, enriched fp stalk-49 was used for the following studies. Supernatants containing the other fusion proteins and supernatants of mock-transfected insect cells were treated the same way. The latter was used as negative control in the bioassays.

Potent IL-6 Antagonistic Activity of the Fusion Proteins-- To test the IL-6 antagonizing activity of the fusion proteins, supernatants of stably transfected insect cells were incubated with IL-6 for 30 min to allow the fusion protein to bind to IL-6. Ba/F3 cells stably transfected with gp130 and IL-6Ralpha (Ba/F3-gp130-IL6R) were stimulated with the IL-6-treated supernatants. After 30 min, cells were lysed, and STAT3 phosphorylation was analyzed. In the presence of supernatant from mock-transfected insect cells, stimulation of Ba/F3-gp130-IL6R cells with 0.5 ng/ml IL-6 is sufficient to induce prominent tyrosine phosphorylation of STAT3 (Fig. 2A, upper and lower panels, lanes 1 and 2). Treatment of Ba/F3-gp130-IL6R cells with IL-6 that was preincubated with supernatants from cells expressing the fusion proteins did not result in significant tyrosine phosphorylation of STAT3 (Fig. 2A, upper panel, lanes 3-5). Thus, all three fusion proteins in the supernatants inhibit IL-6 signaling, since no STAT3 phosphorylation is observed in response to IL-6. A 2-fold higher IL-6 concentration (1 ng/ml) is neutralized only incompletely by the supernatant containing fp AGS-33 (Fig. 2A, lower panel, lane 4).


View larger version (37K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Fig. 2.   IL-6 antagonistic activity of sgp130/sIL-6Ralpha fusion proteins. A: upper panel, Ba/F3-gp130-IL6R cells were incubated with supernatants from insect cells expressing fusion proteins or from mock-transfected insect cells (control) and stimulated with 0.5 ng/ml IL-6 (+) for 30 min or left unstimulated (-) as indicated. Activation of STAT3 was analyzed by immunoblotting of cellular lysates. Activation of STAT3 was detected using a polyclonal antibody against tyrosine phosphorylated STAT3. After stripping of the blot, STAT3 loading was controlled using a polyclonal STAT3 antibody. Lower panel, Ba/F3-gp130-IL6R cells were incubated with supernatant from insect cells expressing fp AGS-33 or mock-transfected insect cells (control) and stimulated with different concentrations of IL-6 for 30 min as indicated. Cellular lysates were analyzed for STAT3 phosphorylation as described above. B, HepG2 cells were incubated with 1 ng/ml IL-6 and 30 ng/ml of fusion-proteins or an equivalent volume of purified mock-vector-transfected cell supernatant (control) for 18 h and metabolically pulse-labeled with 35S for 3 h. Secreted alpha 1-anti-chymotrypsin (alpha 1-ACT) was immunoprecipitated from cell culture supernatants, separated by SDS-PAGE, and analyzed by autoradiography.

IL-6 is the major inducer of acute-phase protein synthesis in hepatocytes, but also in hepatoma cell lines such as HepG2. IL-6 stimulation (1 ng/ml) leads to a substantially increased alpha 1-anti-chymotrypsin production by HepG2 cells as shown by immunoprecipitation of metabolically labeled protein (Fig. 2B, lanes 1 and 2). Purified proteins of control supernatant do not affect alpha 1-anti-chymotrypsin synthesis (Fig. 2B, lane 3). In the presence of the concentrated fusion proteins (30 ng/ml), alpha 1-anti-chymotrypsin synthesis is reduced to the basal level (Fig. 2B, lanes 4-6). Thus, all three fusion proteins inhibit IL-6-induced acute-phase protein synthesis.

Specificity of the IL-6-inhibiting sgp130/sIL-6Ralpha Fusion Proteins-- To demonstrate the specificity of the inhibitory fusion proteins, we compared the proliferation of Ba/F3 cells stably transfected with gp130 and IL-6Ralpha or gp130 and IL-11Ralpha (Ba/F3-gp130-IL11R) in response to 0.9 ng/ml IL-6 or 5 ng/ml IL-11, required for 50 or 80% of maximal cell proliferation, respectively. Trx-IL-11 is a fusion protein of thioredoxin and IL-11 exhibiting IL-11 activity indistinguishable from IL-11 wild type (23). The proliferation of Ba/F3-gp130-IL6R cells treated with a constant amount of IL-6 is inhibited by the fusion protein fp stalk-49 in a concentration-dependent manner. Purified control supernatant had no significant effect (Fig. 3A, left diagram). At a fusion protein concentration of 250-500 ng/ml, cell proliferation is completely abrogated. Proliferation of Ba/F3-gp130-IL11R cells in response to trx-IL-11, however, is not significantly disturbed by fp stalk-49 (Fig. 3A, right diagram). Thus fp stalk-49 specifically inhibits IL-6, but not IL-11 responses. Similar observations were made for the remaining fusion proteins (data not shown).


View larger version (34K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Fig. 3.   Specificity and efficiency of the IL-6-antagonizing sgp130/sIL-6Ralpha fusion proteins. A, Ba/F3-gp130-IL6R (left panel) or Ba/F3-gp130-IL11R cells (right panel) were incubated with a constant amount of IL-6 (0.9 ng/ml) or trx-IL-11 (5 ng/ml), respectively, and serial 2-fold dilutions of inhibitors starting with a concentration of 500 ng/ml. Equivalent volumes of purified mock-vector-transfected cell supernatant were used as a control. After 60 h of incubation, viable cells were quantified using the colorimetric XTT assay (Roche Diagnostic GmbH). Dashed lines and dotted lines correspond to proliferation in the absence of cytokine or inhibitor, respectively, derived from the standard curves (not shown). Mean values from three independent experiments are shown with S.D. values. B, Ba/F3-gp130-IL6R cells were stimulated for 20 min with 0.5 ng/ml IL-6, which was preincubated for 15 min at 4 °C with 1.5 ng/ml fp stalk-49 or the equivalent volume of purified mock-vector-transfected cell supernatant (control) or with increasing amounts of soluble receptors (sR): 1 ng/ml sIL-6Ralpha and 2 ng/ml sgp130 (lane 4), 10 ng/ml sIL-6Ralpha and 20 ng/ml sgp130 (lane 5); and 100 ng/ml sIL-6Ralpha and 200 ng/ml sgp130 (lane 6). Activation of STAT3 was analyzed by immunoblotting of cellular lysates. STAT3 tyrosine phosphorylation was detected as described in legend to Fig. 2A. sIL-6Ralpha and sgp130 were prepared as described previously (12, 33).

Inhibitory Activity of the Fusion Proteins Compared with Separately Expressed sgp130 and sIL-6Ralpha -- Next, we proved that the appropriate fusion of the ligand-binding domains of gp130 and IL-6Ralpha leads to a more potent inhibitor than sgp130 and sIL-6Ralpha separately expressed in insect cells. The inhibition of STAT3 phosphorylation in Ba/F3-gp130-IL6R cells induced by 0.5 ng/ml IL-6 achieved with 1.5 ng/ml fp stalk-49 was compared with inhibition by the combination of sgp130 and sIL-6Ralpha (Fig. 3B). The approximately equimolar ratio of IL-6 and fp stalk-49 is sufficient for almost full suppression of IL-6 induced STAT3 activation (lanes 1-3). In contrast to this extremely high antagonistic potency of the fusion protein, a molar ratio of 1:100 of IL-6 and the combination of sIL-6Ralpha and sgp130 is required to achieve inhibitory activity (lanes 4-6). We conclude that the fusion proteins are of ~100-fold increased inhibitory activity compared with the separate soluble receptor proteins.

    DISCUSSION
TOP
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
REFERENCES

In this study we present a highly potent IL-6 inhibitor based on the ligand-binding domains of the IL-6 receptor subunits IL-6Ralpha and gp130. Many of the existing IL-6 receptor antagonists are IL-6 mutants of binding sites to gp130 (sites II and III). They block IL-6Ralpha by binding via the intact site I but do not recruit gp130 (26, 27). Since the interaction of IL-6 with IL-6Ralpha is of low affinity, so called superantagonists were created by mutating the site I of these antagonists to strengthen alpha -receptor binding. Although the superantagonists perform better, they still have to be applied in a large excess to IL-6 (27). Furthermore, due to the many mutations the proteins are highly immunogenic (28). Neutralizing IL-6 or IL-6Ralpha antibodies have also been used as IL-6 inhibitors. They were tested in clinical trials for the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis (3) or AIDS-associated Kaposi's sarcoma (29) but turned out to be of rather low efficiency. Very recently, potent low molecular mass IL-6 receptor antagonists were described for the first time (30, 31). These antagonists have to be applied in the micromolar range to inhibit picomolar amounts of IL-6.

A new generation of cytokine antagonists is based on soluble receptor fragments that bind the ligand with high affinity and specificity. In the case of IL-6, two receptor subunits are required for high affinity binding, IL-6Ralpha and gp130. Moreover, the complex of IL-6 and sIL-6Ralpha acts agonistically on cells expressing gp130 (10). Conversely, sIL-6Ralpha supports neutralization of IL-6 by sgp130 due to formation of a soluble high affinity ternary complex (12). The new IL-6 receptor antagonist presented in this study stems from the idea that appropriate fusion of the ligand-binding domains of IL-6Ralpha and gp130 should result in a superior antagonist that neutralizes IL-6 with highest affinity and specificity. In the present study three different linkers were used to connect the ligand-binding domains of gp130 and IL-6Ralpha . It turned out that the fusion proteins exhibit similar inhibitory activities, indicating that the estimation of the required linker length has been correct and appropriate peptide linkers were chosen.

All three fusion proteins bind IL-6 as shown by precipitation with IL-6-Sepharose. The fusion protein present in the insect cell supernatant is sufficient to completely antagonize the activity of 0.5 ng/ml (25 pM) IL-6 in the short term STAT3 phosphorylation assay using transfected Ba/F3 cells (Fig. 2A). Since the concentrations of the fusion proteins in the insect cell supernatants are in the range of 1-2 ng/ml (15-30 pM), this points to an inhibitory activity at a molar ratio between agonist and antagonist of 1:1.

In a long term assay such as induction of acute-phase protein synthesis in HepG2 cells, the activity of 1 ng/ml (50 pM) IL-6 was totally blocked by the addition of inhibitory fusion protein at a nearly 10-fold molar excess (450 pM). In the Ba/F3 proliferation assay with fp stalk-49, we determined an IC50 of 6 ng/ml (90 pM) for the inhibition of 0.9 ng/ml IL-6 (45 pM). Thus, in long term assays and therefore also for studies of the inhibitory activity of the fusion proteins in vivo, an about 10-fold molar excess of fusion protein over IL-6 should be applied.

Besides their inhibitory activity the specificity of the fusion proteins is an important feature to assess their potential value for anti-cytokine therapies. IL-11 most closely resembles IL-6 because it also signals via gp130 homodimers but binds to a different alpha -receptor, namely IL-11Ralpha . In the Ba/F3-proliferation assay, amounts of fusion proteins that significantly inhibit IL-6 activity had no effect on IL-11 induced proliferation (data shown only for fp stalk-49). Therefore, at the concentrations used in our assays each of the three fusion proteins is a potent and specific inhibitor of IL-6 activity.

The superior activity of the fused ligand-binding domains of gp130 and IL-6Ralpha compared with the separate soluble receptors sgp130 and sIL-6Ralpha is probably the most important issue left to be proven to confirm the value of our concept. IL-6-induced STAT3 phosphorylation in Ba/F3 cells is inhibited by the presence of equimolar amounts of fusion protein. To achieve a similar inhibition an at least 100-fold molar excess of sgp130 and sIL-6Ralpha has to be applied. This intriguing result clearly demonstrates the extraordinary high inhibitory activity of the fusion protein. What is the explanation for this finding? In the above assay, a low amount of IL-6 that is in the range of pathophysiological IL-6 concentrations (500 pg/ml) was applied. When the separate soluble receptors were used, IL-6 first binds to the sIL-6Ralpha . This interaction is of low affinity, and therefore the complex of IL-6 and sIL-6Ralpha might dissociate before it encounters sgp130. In the fusion protein, the initial complex of IL-6 bound to domains D2 and D3 of IL-6Ralpha can be immediately trapped by the covalently linked ligand-binding domains of gp130 before dissociation occurs.

Our inhibitor strategy is also applicable to other cytokines that signal via heteromeric receptor complexes. Indeed, in a recent publication Economides et al. (32) used a similar approach to create so called "cytokine traps" as highly potent inhibitors for IL-1, IL-4, and IL-6. In their study the complete ectodomains of the respective receptor subunits including the regions dispensable for ligand binding were fused to the Fc part of human IgG. This results in dimerization of the receptor chains by disulfide bond formation of the Fc parts. In the case of the IL-6 inhibitor, this leads, besides the desired sgp130-Fc/sIL-6Ralpha -Fc heterodimers, to the formation of gp130-Fc/gp130-Fc and sIL-6Ralpha -Fc/sIL-6Ralpha -Fc homodimers. As a consequence, before application, the heterodimer must be separated from the homodimers. On the XG-1 myeloma cells an IC50 of 50 pM sgp130-Fc/sIL-6Ralpha -Fc was determined for the neutralization of 2.5 pM (0.05 ng/ml) IL-6 (32). On our Ba/F3-gp130-IL6R cells treated with 45 pM IL-6, the IC50 of fp stalk-49 is 90 pM. If one takes into account the molar ratio between the IL-6 concentration in the two different proliferation assays and the IC50 of the respective inhibitor, it turns out that fp stalk-49 is about 10-fold more potent than sgp130-Fc/sIL-6Ralpha -Fc. These findings suggest that the more structure-based approach presented in our study confirms the validity of the basic concept and furthermore leads to optimized inhibitory fusion proteins.

We conclude that appropriate fusion of the ligand-binding domains of soluble receptor proteins leads to cytokine inhibitors of extraordinary activity which might be of considerable therapeutical value for the development of new anti-cytokine therapies.

    ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

We thank Dr. John Wijdenes (DIACLONE, Besançon, France) for the kind gift of the gp130 antibody B-T2. We also thank Dr. Iris Behrmann for careful reading of the manuscript.

    FOOTNOTES

* This work was supported by grants from the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (SFB 542) and the Fonds der Chemischen Industrie (Frankfurt a. M.).The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.

Dagger To whom correspondence may be addressed: Inst. für Biochemie, Universitätsklinikum RWTH Aachen, Pauwelsstrasse 30, 52057 Aachen, Germany. Tel.: 49-241-80-88830; Fax: 49-241-80-82428; E-mail: heinrich@rwth-aachen.de (for P. C. H.) or Tel.: 49-241-80-88860; Fax: 49-241-80-82428; E-mail: mueller-newen@rwth-aachen.de (for G. M.-N.).

Published, JBC Papers in Press, March 19, 2003, DOI 10.1074/jbc.C300081200

    ABBREVIATIONS

The abbreviations used are: IL, interleukin; D, domain; fp, fusion protein; s, soluble; STAT, signal transducer and activator of transcription; ELISA, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay.

    REFERENCES
TOP
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
REFERENCES

1. Goldenberg, M. M. (1999) Clin. Ther. 21, 75-87[CrossRef][Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
2. Akira, S., Taga, T., and Kishimoto, T. (1993) Adv. Immunol. 54, 1-78[Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
3. Wendling, D., Racadot, E., and Wijdenes, J. (1993) J. Rheumatol. 20, 259-262[Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
4. Bataille, R., Barlogie, B., Lu, Z. Y., Rossi, J. F., Lavabre-Bertrand, T., Beck, T., Wijdenes, J., Brochier, J., and Klein, B. (1995) Blood 86, 685-691[Abstract/Free Full Text]
5. Wells, J. A., and de Vos, A. M. (1996) Annu. Rev. Biochem. 65, 609-634[CrossRef][Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
6. Heinrich, P. C., Behrmann, I., Müller-Newen, G., Schaper, F., and Graeve, L. (1998) Biochem. J. 334, 297-314[Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
7. Bravo, J., and Heath, J. K. (2000) EMBO J. 19, 2399-2411[Abstract/Free Full Text]
8. Lütticken, C., Wegenka, U. M., Yuan, J., Buschmann, J., Schindler, C., Ziemiecki, A., Harpur, A. G., Wilks, A. F., Yasukawa, K., Taga, T., Kishimoto, T., Barbieri, G., Pellegrini, S., Sendtner, M., Heinrich, P. C., and Horn, F. (1994) Science 263, 89-92[Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
9. Stahl, N., Boulton, T. G., Farruggella, T., Ip, N. Y., Davis, S., Witthuhn, B. A., Quelle, F. W., Silvennoinen, O., Barbieri, G., Pellegrini, S., Ihle, J. N., and Yancopoulus, G. D. (1994) Science 263, 92-95[Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
10. Taga, T., Hibi, M., Hirata, Y., Yamasaki, K., Yasukawa, K., Matsuda, T., Hirano, T., and Kishimoto, T. (1989) Cell 58, 573-581[Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
11. Narazaki, M., Yasukawa, K., Saito, T., Ohsugi, Y., Fukui, H., Koishihara, Y., Yancopoulos, G. D., Taga, T., and Kishimoto, T. (1993) Blood 82, 1120-1126[Abstract]
12. Müller-Newen, G., Küster, A., Hemmann, U., Keul, R., Horsten, U., Martens, A., Graeve, L., Wijdenes, J., and Heinrich, P. C. (1998) J. Immunol. 161, 6347-6355[Abstract/Free Full Text]
13. Honda, M., Yamamoto, S., Cheng, M., Yasukawa, K., Suzuki, H., Saito, T., Usugi, Y., Tokunaga, T., and Kishimoto, T. (1992) J. Immunol. 148, 2175-2180[Abstract/Free Full Text]
14. Müller-Newen, G., Köhne, C., Keul, R., Hemmann, U., Müller-Esterl, W., Wijdenes, J., Brakenhoff, J. P. J., Hart, M. H. L., and Heinrich, P. C. (1996) Eur. J. Biochem. 236, 837-842[Abstract]
15. Yamasaki, K., Taga, T., Hirata, Y., Yawata, H., Kawanishi, Y., Seed, B., Taniguchi, T., Hirano, T., and Kishimoto, T. (1988) Science 241, 825-828[Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
16. Hibi, M., Murakami, M., Saito, M., Hirano, T., Taga, T., and Kishimoto, T. (1990) Cell 63, 1149-1157[Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
17. Yawata, H., Yasukawa, K., Natsuka, S., Murakami, M., Yamasaki, K., Hibi, M., Taga, T., and Kishimoto, T. (1993) EMBO J. 12, 1705-1712[Abstract]
18. Horsten, U., Schmitz-Van de Leur, H., Müllberg, J., Heinrich, P. C., and Rose-John, S. (1995) FEBS Lett. 360, 43-46[CrossRef][Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
19. Simpson, R. J., Hammacher, A., Smith, D. K., Matthews, J. M., and Ward, L. D. (1997) Protein Sci. 6, 929-955[Abstract/Free Full Text]
20. Kurth, I., Horsten, U., Pflanz, S., Dahmen, H., Küster, A., Grötzinger, J., Heinrich, P. C., and Müller-Newen, G. (1999) J. Immunol. 162, 1480-1487[Abstract/Free Full Text]
21. Pflanz, S., Kurth, I., Grötzinger, J., Heinrich, P. C., and Müller-Newen, G. (2000) J. Immunol. 165, 7042-7049[Abstract/Free Full Text]
22. Chow, D., He, X., Snow, A. L., Rose-John, S., and Garcia, K. C. (2001) Science 291, 2150-2155[Abstract/Free Full Text]
23. Dahmen, H., Horsten, U., Küster, A., Jacques, Y., Minvielle, S., Kerr, I. M., Ciliberto, G., Paonessa, G., Heinrich, P. C., and Müller-Newen, G. (1998) Biochem. J. 331, 695-702[Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
24. Moritz, R. L., Ward, L. D., Tu, G. F., Fabri, L. J., Ji, H., Yasukawa, K., and Simpson, R. J. (1999) Growth Factors 16, 265-278[Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
25. Varghese, J. N., Moritz, R. L., Lou, M. Z., Van Donkelaar, A., Ji, H., Ivancic, N., Branson, K. M., Hall, N. E., and Simpson, R. J. (2002) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 99, 15959-15964[Abstract/Free Full Text]
26. Ehlers, M., Grötzinger, J., deHon, F. D., Müllberg, J., Brakenhoff, J. P. J., Liu, J., Wollmer, A., and Rose-John, S. (1994) J. Immunol. 153, 1744-1753[Abstract/Free Full Text]
27. Savino, R., Ciapponi, L., Lahm, A., Demartis, A., Cabibbo, A., Toniatti, C., Delmastro, P., Altamura, S., and Ciliberto, G. (1994) EMBO J. 13, 5863-5870[Abstract]
28. Ciapponi, L., Maione, D., Scoumanne, A., Costa, P., Hansen, M. B., Svenson, M., Bendtzen, K., Alonzi, T., Paonessa, G., Cortese, R., Ciliberto, G., and Savino, R. (1997) Nat. Biotechnol. 15, 997-1001[Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
29. Racadot, E., Audhuy, B., Duvernoy, H., Thyss, A., Lang, J. M., Wijdenes, J., and Herve, P. (1995) Cytokines Mol. Ther. 1, 133-138[Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
30. Hayashi, M., Rho, M. C., Fukami, A., Enomoto, A., Nonaka, S., Sekiguchi, Y., Yanagisawa, T., Yamashita, A., Nogawa, T., Kamano, Y., and Komiyama, K. (2002) J. Pharmacol. Exp. Ther. 303, 104-109[Abstract/Free Full Text]
31. Hayashi, M., Rho, M. C., Enomoto, A., Fukami, A., Kim, Y. P., Kikuchi, Y., Sunazuka, T., Hirose, T., Komiyama, K., and Omura, S. (2002) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 99, 14728-14733[Abstract/Free Full Text]
32. Economides, A. N., Carpenter, L. R., Rudge, J. S., Wong, V., Koehler-Stec, E. M., Hartnett, C., Pyles, E. A., Xu, X., Daly, T. J., Young, M. R., Fandl, J. P., Lee, F., Carver, S., McNay, J., Bailey, K., Ramakanth, S., Hutabarat, R., Huang, T. T., Radziejewski, C., Yancopoulos, G. D., and Stahl, N. (2003) Nat. Med. 9, 47-52[CrossRef][Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
33. Weiergräber, O., Hemmann, U., Küster, A., Müller-Newen, G., Schneider, J., Rose-John, S., Kurschat, P., Brakenhoff, J. P. J., Hart, M. H. L., Stabel, S., and Heinrich, P. C. (1995) Eur. J. Biochem. 234, 661-669[Abstract]


Copyright © 2003 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.