Exploiting growth factor modulation of alarmin release in atopic dermatitis

Lead Research Organisation: University of Manchester
Department Name: School of Biological Sciences

Abstract

Context: Atopic eczema is the most common skin disease worldwide, affecting up to 30% of children. The disease is caused by cells within the skin surface releasing inflammatory signals that initiate an allergic immune response. This allergic response is essential for triggering the itchy, red rash, which can impact of the patient's quality of life, disturbing the child's concentration, child and parent sleep, leading to disruption of daily family life. Novel findings from our laboratory, some of which has recently been published in a top international allergy journal, have found that two cellular pathways within skin cells are closely intertwined and essential for triggering this allergic skin disease. Firstly, we discovered that release of the inflammatory signal IL-33 is critical for the induction of eczema; in a Japanese mouse model that closely mimics childhood eczema, we can prevent disease developing by blocking IL-33. This finding is supported by the clinical trial of anti-IL-33 antibody etokimab in eczema. Additionally, pilot data from our laboratory has also shown that the release of IL-33 by a common bacterial trigger of eczema is regulated by a second cellular pathway involving the keratinocyte growth factor EGF. Adding EGF to skin cells inhibits the production of eczema-inducing alarmin IL-33. In contrast, neutralising antibodies to EGF promotes the release of IL-33, promoting the allergic phenotype.

Aims and objectives: This research proposal aims to unravel the intricate interaction between two cellular pathways (IL-33 and growth factors such as EGF) in normal skin and during eczema. We will also evaluate the repurposing of drugs which are already used in clinical practice and which act on these cellular pathways, as novel therapies for this common and often debilitating disease. This program of work involves using our well established human skin cell model alongside preclinical mouse models of eczema, one available in the UK and the other with our Japanese collaborators, to evaluate the ability of various drugs to manipulate these pathways, prior to clinical trials. We will use phospho-arrays to interrogate key pathways in an unbiased way, which can then be manipulated by chemical inhibitors and activators. We will examine known candidates within these pathways (EGF and related chemicals), as well as those recently discovered through our pilot work to be essential partners in active release of IL-33 from the nucleus of the cell (histone and related chemicals). Impact on eczema will be assessed by evaluating skin scores, skin barrier function and detailed analysis of the immune response.

Potential applications and benefits: Better understanding of the molecular and cellular basis of diseases is at the heart of developing more effective therapies. The treatment of eczema for the vast majority of children has remained unchanged over the last half century and involves application of moisturisers and steroids. We believe that pilot data from our laboratory provides clues to two seminal pathways, which if manipulated may aid in the development of new treatments, particularly for patients with severe disease where treatments are currently limited and expensive. These investigations may also be applicable to other allergic diseases where IL-33 is a key player, particularly allergic asthma, and may help in our understanding of why some therapies used in cancer treatment (e.g. cetuximab) commonly cause bad eczema as a debilitating side-effect.

Technical Summary

Atopic dermatitis (AD) is initiated by keratinocytes releasing IL-33 that initiates a type-2 immune response. Our novel findings show that two cellular pathways are intertwined and essential for triggering this immune response both in vitro and in vivo. We have demonstrated that IL-33 is critical both in human keratinocytes and a mouse model of AD. Additional pilot data from our lab demonstrates that the S. aureus-induced IL-33 release from live cells is regulated by EGF.
Using two well established models (human and mouse) we aim to unravel the intricate interaction between IL-33 release and the EGF pathway in response to two common environmental triggers S. aureus and house dust mite (HDM).
Cellular work will use phospho-arrays to identify key pathway components, which will be studied by western blot and imaging. We will examine IL-33 binding partner candidates within these pathways using immunoprecipitation to identify additional therapeutic candidates for inhibition of IL-33 release (e.g. histone 2B, exportin-1, HMGB1). Candidate inhibitors (e.g. EGF, neutralising antibodies, EGF pathway inhibitors (mTOR, PIK) will be screened after keratinocyte co-culture with S aureus and HDM. We will also evaluate activity of repurposing drugs as novel therapies which have activity in these cellular pathways and are already used in clinic practice. Candidate inhibitors will then be tested in two separate mouse models of human atopic dermatitis: flaky tail (UK) which carry a functional deficiency in a skin barrier protein Filaggrin, a protein consistently shown associated with human AD; NC/Tnd mice (Tokyo) a spontaneous model of eczema. Clinical eczema skin scores, skin barrier function, and immune cell infiltration will be measured after triggering of AD using S. aureus and HDM.
Manipulating IL-33 and EGF pathways should aid in development of novel eczema therapies, as well as understanding the pathophysiology of other allergic phenotypes where IL-33 is a key player.

Publications

10 25 50
 
Description Lydia Becker Institute of Immunology & Inflammation 
Organisation University of Manchester
Department Manchester Collaborative Centre for Inflammation Research (MCCIR)
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Drs Arkwright, Pennock and O'Neill are all members of the new School of Biological Sciences, Faculty of Biology Medicine and Health, which takes in one third of all undergraduate and postgraduate students at the University. All three investigators are part of the School of Biological Sciences which hosts Dermatology and Infection/Immunity Divisions. Research work in Manchester will be conducted in the AV Hill building, a £39M research centre and home to one of the largest biomedical complexes in Europe, housing 300 scientists in 50 research groups. The Faculty of Biology Medicine and Health houses key core technology facilities including flow cytometry, proteomics, histology, sequencing and bioinformatics, cell and tissue culture, each of which comes with highly experienced technical staff on hand for advice and equipment maintenance.
Collaborator Contribution The Lydia Becker Institute of Immunology and Inflammation (previously MCCIR) is a recently established Institute linking all aspects of immunology research. It is home to internationally renowned immunology and inflammation expertise in a vast array of basic and applied disciplines. It performs fundamental and translational exploratory science, applying the latest technologies to address the key new concepts in health and many areas of clinical unmet need. The great breadth and diversity of research in our institute emphasises how immunology plays an ever-increasing role in modern medicine.
Impact Ongoing collaboration between basic and translational medical research. Currently two manuscripts in Peer-review.
Start Year 2018
 
Description TUAT Collaborative Research Partnership 
Organisation Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology
Country Japan 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Drs Arkwright, Pennock and O'Neill are all members of the new School of Biological Sciences, Faculty of Biology Medicine and Health, which takes in one third of all undergraduate and postgraduate students at the University. All three investigators are part of the School of Biological Sciences which hosts Dermatology and Infection/Immunity Divisions. Research work in Manchester will be conducted in the AV Hill building, a £39M research centre and home to one of the largest biomedical complexes in Europe, housing 300 scientists in 50 research groups. The Faculty of Biology Medicine and Health houses key core technology facilities including flow cytometry, proteomics, histology, sequencing and bioinformatics, cell and tissue culture, each of which comes with highly experienced technical staff on hand for advice and equipment maintenance.
Collaborator Contribution Professors Matsuda and Tanaka lead the Laboratories of Veterinary Molecular Pathology and Therapeutics and Laboratory of Comparative Animal Medicine within the Department of Veterinary Medicine, Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology, Tokyo, Japan. This is one of the largest academic Veterinary Institutes in Japan. The laboratories have a large animal house facility, housing one of the only dermatitis NC/Tnd mouse populations in the world. One of the major research focuses of the department is the study of this mouse model of human AD, using both in vivo (scratching and dermatitis) as well as in vitro assays. NC/Tnd mice are a unique animal model that develops skin lesions similar to human AD spontaneously under conventional housing. Skin lesions can be induced in a specific pathogen free condition by topical application of antigens. They have published extensively on this field over the last 20 years. Over the last 14 years there has been a strong collaboration between the Tokyo and Manchester academics with regular meetings and shared projects involving the two academic groups. The current Leo Grant which started in 2016 has allowed for consolidation and increased research output, allowing translation from basic to translational science.
Impact Multidisciplinary outputs linking Human Biology and Veterinary Medicine over 15 years: 1. Orito K, Chida Y, Fujisawa C, Arkwright PD, Matsuda H. A new analytical system for quantitating scratching behavior in mice. Br J Dermatol 2004;150:1-6. 2. Arkwright PD, Fujisawa C, Tanaka A, Matsuda H. Mycobacterium vaccae reduces Scratching Behavior but not the Rash in NC Mice with Eczema: A Randomized, Blinded, Placebo-Controlled Trial. J Invest Dermatol 2005;124:140-3. 3. Tanaka A, Matsuda A, Jung K, Jang H, Makita Y, Amagai Y, Takai M, Oida K, Nishikawa S, Ishizaka S, Arkwright PD, Matsuda H. Ultra-pure soft water ameliorates atopic skin disease by preventing metallic soap deposition. Acta Dermato-Venereologica 2015;95:787-91. 4. Jang J, Matsuda A, Jung K, Karasawa K, Matsuda K, Oida K, Ishizaka S, Ahn G, Amagai Y, Moon C, Kim S-H, Arkwright PD, Takamori K, Matsuda H, Tanaka A. Skin pH is the master switch of kallikrein 5-mediated skin barrier destruction in a murine atopic dermatitis model. J Invest Dermatol, 2016;136:127-35. 5. Tanaka A, Okamoto N, Kondo M, Arkwright PD, Matsuda K, Ishizaka S, Karasawa K, Oida K, Amagai Y, Matsuda A, Jung K, Yokota S, Jang H, Noda E, Kakinuma R, Yasui K, Kaku U, Matsuda H. Mast cell hyperactivity underpins the development of oxygen-induced retinopathy. J Clin Invest 2017;127:3987-4000. 6. Al Kindi A, Williams H, Matsuda K, Alkahtani AM, Saville C, Tan SY, O'Neill C, Tanaka A, Matsuda H, Pennock JL, Arkwright PD. Staphylococcus aureus Sbi protein induces eczema by releasing IL-33 from skin. 2020 Manuscript in preparation.
Start Year 2016
 
Description 6th Mancunian Skin Club - 'The Skin Exposome' Presentation 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Other audiences
Results and Impact Poster presentation by Dr Helen Williams, research on Modelling S. aureus to drive a type 2 phenotype in keratinocytes: lessons from the lab.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022