A Restricted Role for TYK2 Catalytic Activity in Human Cytokine Responses Revealed by Novel TYK2-Selective Inhibitors

Sue J. Sohn(Sunesis (United States)), Kathy Barrett(Biochemical Society), Anne van Abbema(Biochemical Society), Christine Chang(Biochemical Society), Pawan Bir Kohli(Biochemical Society), Hidenobu Kanda(Gene Therapy Laboratory), Janice D. Smith(Biochemical Society), Yingjie Lai(Sunesis (United States)), Aihe Zhou(Sunesis (United States)), Birong Zhang(Sunesis (United States)), Wenqian Yang(dataPartner (Czechia)), Karen Williams(Harlow College), Calum MacLeod(Harlow College), Christopher A. Hurley(Harlow College), Janusz J. Kulagowski(Harlow College), Nicholas Lewin‐Koh(BioClinica (United States)), Hart S. Dengler(Sunesis (United States)), Adam R. Johnson(Biochemical Society), Nico Ghilardi(Gene Therapy Laboratory), Mark Zak(Sunesis (United States)), Jun Liang(Sunesis (United States)), Wade Blair(Biochemical Society), Steven Magnuson(Sunesis (United States)), Lawren C. Wu(Sunesis (United States))
The Journal of Immunology
July 27, 2013
Cited by 126Open Access
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Abstract

TYK2 is a JAK family protein tyrosine kinase activated in response to multiple cytokines, including type I IFNs, IL-6, IL-10, IL-12, and IL-23. Extensive studies of mice that lack TYK2 expression indicate that the IFN-α, IL-12, and IL-23 pathways, but not the IL-6 or IL-10 pathways, are compromised. In contrast, there have been few studies of the role of TYK2 in primary human cells. A genetic mutation at the tyk2 locus that results in a lack of TYK2 protein in a single human patient has been linked to defects in the IFN-α, IL-6, IL-10, IL-12, and IL-23 pathways, suggesting a broad role for TYK2 protein in human cytokine responses. In this article, we have used a panel of novel potent TYK2 small-molecule inhibitors with varying degrees of selectivity against other JAK kinases to address the requirement for TYK2 catalytic activity in cytokine pathways in primary human cells. Our results indicate that the biological processes that require TYK2 catalytic function in humans are restricted to the IL-12 and IL-23 pathways, and suggest that inhibition of TYK2 catalytic activity may be an efficacious approach for the treatment of select autoimmune diseases without broad immunosuppression.


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