De novo design of miniprotein antagonists of cytokine storm inducers

Buwei Huang(University of Washington), Brian Coventry(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Marta T. Borowska(Stanford University), Dimitrios C. Arhontoulis(Medical University of South Carolina), Marc Expòsit(University of Washington), Mohamad H. Abedi(University of Washington), Kevin M. Jude(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Samer Halabiya(University of Washington), Aza Allen(University of Washington), Cami Cordray(University of Washington), Inna Goreshnik(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Maggie Ahlrichs(University of Washington), Sidney Chan(University of Washington), Hillary C. Tunggal(University of Washington), Michelle DeWitt(University of Washington), Nathaniel Hyams(Clemson University), Lauren Carter(University of Washington), Lance Stewart(University of Washington), Deborah H. Fuller(University of Washington), Ying Mei(Medical University of South Carolina), K. Christopher García(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), David Baker(University of Washington)
Nature Communications
August 16, 2024
Cited by 41Open Access
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Abstract

Cytokine release syndrome (CRS), commonly known as cytokine storm, is an acute systemic inflammatory response that is a significant global health threat. Interleukin-6 (IL-6) and interleukin-1 (IL-1) are key pro-inflammatory cytokines involved in CRS and are hence critical therapeutic targets. Current antagonists, such as tocilizumab and anakinra, target IL-6R/IL-1R but have limitations due to their long half-life and systemic anti-inflammatory effects, making them less suitable for acute or localized treatments. Here we present the de novo design of small protein antagonists that prevent IL-1 and IL-6 from interacting with their receptors to activate signaling. The designed proteins bind to the IL-6R, GP130 (an IL-6 co-receptor), and IL-1R1 receptor subunits with binding affinities in the picomolar to low-nanomolar range. X-ray crystallography studies reveal that the structures of these antagonists closely match their computational design models. In a human cardiac organoid disease model, the IL-1R antagonists demonstrated protective effects against inflammation and cardiac damage induced by IL-1β. These minibinders show promise for administration via subcutaneous injection or intranasal/inhaled routes to mitigate acute cytokine storm effects.


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