Small Molecule IL-36γ Antagonist as a Novel Therapeutic Approach for Plaque Psoriasis

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Abstract

IL-36 cytokines are pro-inflammatory members of the IL-1 family that are upregulated in inflammatory disorders. Specifically, IL-36γ is highly expressed in active psoriatic lesions and can drive pro-inflammatory processes in 3D human skin equivalents supporting a role for this target in skin inflammation. Small molecule antagonists of interleukins have been historically challenging to generate. Nevertheless, we performed a small molecule high-throughput screen to identify IL-36 antagonists using a novel TR-FRET binding assay. Several compounds, including 2-oxypyrimidine containing structural analogs of the marketed endothelin receptor A antagonist Ambrisentan, were identified as hits from the screen. A-552 was identified as a the most potent antagonist of human IL-36γ, but not the closely related family member IL-36α, was capable of attenuating IL-36γ induced responses in mouse and human disease models. Additionally, x-ray crystallography studies identified key amino acid residues in the binding pocket present in human IL-36γ that are absent in human IL-36α. A-552 represents a first-in-class small molecule antagonist of IL-36 signaling that could be used as a chemical tool to further investigate the role of this pathway in inflammatory skin diseases such as psoriasis.

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Todorović, V., Su, Z., Putman, C. B., Kakavas, S. J., Salte, K. M., McDonald, H. A., … Scott, V. E. (2019). Small Molecule IL-36γ Antagonist as a Novel Therapeutic Approach for Plaque Psoriasis. Scientific Reports, 9(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-45626-w

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