In:
The Journal of Immunology, The American Association of Immunologists, Vol. 161, No. 8 ( 1998-10-15), p. 4236-4243
Abstract:
The immunomodulatory drug thalidomide has been shown to be clinically useful in a number of situations due to its ability to inhibit TNF-α synthesis. However, its use is restricted by potentially serious side effects, including teratogenicity and neuorotoxicity; furthermore, insolubility may present problems in terms of systemic bioavailability. Recently, structural modifications of thalidomide have been designed enabling greatly enhanced anti-TNF-α activity in LPS-treated mice. In contrast to thalidomide (LPS-induced TNF-α IC50 ∼200 μM in DMSO) and other analogs tested, one of these compounds, CC-3052 (IC50 ∼1 μM in water), is water soluble. Furthermore, this analog exhibits increased stability in human plasma (t1/2 ∼17.5 vs 1.5 h for thalidomide) and appears to be nontoxic, nonmutagenic, and nonteratogenic. At pharmacologically active levels, cellular proliferation and LPS-induced IL-6 mRNA and IL-12p40 mRNA (as well as IL-1β and IL-6 protein levels) in whole blood cultures were not affected; apparent inhibition of NK activity by CC-3052 was reversed upon addition of exogenous rTNF-α. In addition, IL-10 mRNA and protein levels were increased. These properties are consistent with results indicating inhibition of phosphodiesterase type IV activity by CC-3052. Furthermore, CC-3052 did not increase the degradation rate of macrophage TNF-α transcripts nor inhibit LPS-induced primary macrophage NF-κB activation. Taken together, the potency of selective TNF-α inhibition, water solubility, and increased plasma stability make CC-3052 an excellent candidate for further development and clinical evaluation for the treatment of TNF-α-mediated disease.
Type of Medium:
Online Resource
ISSN:
0022-1767
,
1550-6606
DOI:
10.4049/jimmunol.161.8.4236
Language:
English
Publisher:
The American Association of Immunologists
Publication Date:
1998
detail.hit.zdb_id:
1475085-5
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