Selective inhibition of the p38α MAPK–MK2 axis inhibits inflammatory cues including inflammasome priming signals

Chun Wang(Washington University in St. Louis), Susan L. Hockerman(Confluence Life Sciences (United States)), E. Jon Jacobsen(Confluence Life Sciences (United States)), Yael Alippe(Washington University in St. Louis), Shaun R. Selness(Confluence Life Sciences (United States)), Heidi R. Hope(Confluence Life Sciences (United States)), Jeffrey L. Hirsch(Confluence Life Sciences (United States)), Stephen J. Mnich(Confluence Life Sciences (United States)), Matthew J. Saabye(Confluence Life Sciences (United States)), William F. Hood(Confluence Life Sciences (United States)), Sheri L. Bonar(Confluence Life Sciences (United States)), Yousef Abu‐Amer(Washington University in St. Louis), Ariela Haimovich(University of California San Diego), Hal M. Hoffman(University of California San Diego), Joseph B. Monahan(Confluence Life Sciences (United States)), Gabriel Mbalaviele(Washington University in St. Louis)
The Journal of Experimental Medicine
March 16, 2018
Cited by 103Open Access
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Abstract

p38α activation of multiple effectors may underlie the failure of global p38α inhibitors in clinical trials. A unique inhibitor (CDD-450) was developed that selectively blocked p38α activation of the proinflammatory kinase MK2 while sparing p38α activation of PRAK and ATF2. Next, the hypothesis that the p38α-MK2 complex mediates inflammasome priming cues was tested. CDD-450 had no effect on NLRP3 expression, but it decreased IL-1β expression by promoting IL-1β mRNA degradation. Thus, IL-1β is regulated not only transcriptionally by NF-κB and posttranslationally by the inflammasomes but also posttranscriptionally by p38α-MK2. CDD-450 also accelerated TNF-α and IL-6 mRNA decay, inhibited inflammation in mice with cryopyrinopathy, and was as efficacious as global p38α inhibitors in attenuating arthritis in rats and cytokine expression by cells from patients with cryopyrinopathy and rheumatoid arthritis. These findings have clinical translation implications as CDD-450 offers the potential to avoid tachyphylaxis associated with global p38α inhibitors that may result from their inhibition of non-MK2 substrates involved in antiinflammatory and housekeeping responses.


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