TGFβ2 and TGFβ3 isoforms drive fibrotic disease pathogenesis

Tianhe Sun(Genesys (United States)), Zhiyu Huang, Wei‐Ching Liang, Jianping Yin, WeiYu Lin, Jia Wu, Jean-Michel Vernes, Jeff Lutman(Cytokinetics (United States)), Patrick Caplazi, Surinder Jeet, Tiffany Wong, Manda Wong, Daryle J. DePianto(Genesys (United States)), Katrina B. Morshead(Genesys (United States)), Kai-Hui Sun(PDL BioPharma (United States)), Zora Modrušan(PDL BioPharma (United States)), Jason A. Vander Heiden(Bioinformatics Institute), Alexander R. Abbas(Bioinformatics Institute), Hua Zhang, Min Xu, Elsa-Noah N’Diaye(Genesys (United States)), Meron Roose-Girma, Paul J. Wolters(University of California, San Francisco), Rajbharan Yadav(Cytokinetics (United States)), Siddharth Sukumaran(Cytokinetics (United States)), Nico Ghilardi(Genesys (United States)), Racquel Corpuz, Claire Emson, Yumin Meng, Thirumalai R. Ramalingam(South West College), Patrick J. Lupardus, Hans D. Brightbill, Dhaya Seshasayee, Yan Wu, Joseph R. Arron(Genesys (United States))
Science Translational Medicine
August 4, 2021
Cited by 131Open Access
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Abstract

expression is increased in human lung and liver fibrotic tissues compared to healthy control tissues. Thus, TGFβ2 and TGFβ3 may play a pathological role in fibrosis. Inducible conditional knockout mice and anti-TGFβ isoform-selective antibodies demonstrated that TGFβ2 and TGFβ3 are independently involved in mouse fibrosis models in vivo, and selective TGFβ2 and TGFβ3 inhibition does not lead to the increased inflammation observed with pan-TGFβ isoform inhibition. A cocrystal structure of a TGFβ2-anti-TGFβ2/3 antibody complex reveals an allosteric isoform-selective inhibitory mechanism. Therefore, inhibiting TGFβ2 and/or TGFβ3 while sparing TGFβ1 may alleviate fibrosis without toxicity concerns associated with pan-TGFβ blockade.


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