Scientific Reports (Jun 2023)

Tozorakimab (MEDI3506): an anti-IL-33 antibody that inhibits IL-33 signalling via ST2 and RAGE/EGFR to reduce inflammation and epithelial dysfunction

  • Elizabeth England,
  • D. Gareth Rees,
  • Ian Christopher Scott,
  • Sara Carmen,
  • Denice T. Y. Chan,
  • Catherine E. Chaillan Huntington,
  • Kirsty F. Houslay,
  • Teodor Erngren,
  • Mark Penney,
  • Jayesh B. Majithiya,
  • Laura Rapley,
  • Dorothy A. Sims,
  • Claire Hollins,
  • Elizabeth C. Hinchy,
  • Martin D. Strain,
  • Benjamin P. Kemp,
  • Dominic J. Corkill,
  • Richard D. May,
  • Katherine A. Vousden,
  • Robin J. Butler,
  • Tomas Mustelin,
  • Tristan J. Vaughan,
  • David C. Lowe,
  • Caroline Colley,
  • E. Suzanne Cohen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-36642-y
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
pp. 1 – 15

Abstract

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Abstract Interleukin (IL)-33 is a broad-acting alarmin cytokine that can drive inflammatory responses following tissue damage or infection and is a promising target for treatment of inflammatory disease. Here, we describe the identification of tozorakimab (MEDI3506), a potent, human anti-IL-33 monoclonal antibody, which can inhibit reduced IL-33 (IL-33red) and oxidized IL-33 (IL-33ox) activities through distinct serum-stimulated 2 (ST2) and receptor for advanced glycation end products/epidermal growth factor receptor (RAGE/EGFR complex) signalling pathways. We hypothesized that a therapeutic antibody would require an affinity higher than that of ST2 for IL-33, with an association rate greater than 107 M−1 s−1, to effectively neutralize IL-33 following rapid release from damaged tissue. An innovative antibody generation campaign identified tozorakimab, an antibody with a femtomolar affinity for IL-33red and a fast association rate (8.5 × 107 M−1 s−1), which was comparable to soluble ST2. Tozorakimab potently inhibited ST2-dependent inflammatory responses driven by IL-33 in primary human cells and in a murine model of lung epithelial injury. Additionally, tozorakimab prevented the oxidation of IL-33 and its activity via the RAGE/EGFR signalling pathway, thus increasing in vitro epithelial cell migration and repair. Tozorakimab is a novel therapeutic agent with a dual mechanism of action that blocks IL-33red and IL-33ox signalling, offering potential to reduce inflammation and epithelial dysfunction in human disease.