mAbs (Jan 2021)

A non-clinical comparative study of IL-23 antibodies in psoriasis

  • Li Zhou,
  • Yibing Wang,
  • Qi Wan,
  • Fei Wu,
  • Jeffrey Barbon,
  • Robert Dunstan,
  • Stephen Gauld,
  • Mark Konrad,
  • Laura Leys,
  • Richard McCarthy,
  • Marian Namovic,
  • Christine Nelson,
  • Gary Overmeyer,
  • Denise Perron,
  • Zhi Su,
  • Leyu Wang,
  • Susan Westmoreland,
  • Jun Zhang,
  • Rui Zhu,
  • Geertruida Veldman

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/19420862.2021.1964420
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1

Abstract

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Four antibodies that inhibit interleukin (IL)-23 are approved for the treatment of moderate-to-severe plaque psoriasis. Here, we present non-clinical data comparing ustekinumab, guselkumab, tildrakizumab and risankizumab with regard to thermostability, IL-23 binding affinity, inhibitory-binding mode, in vitro potency and in vivo efficacy. Risankizumab and guselkumab exhibited 5-fold higher affinity for IL-23 and showed more potent inhibition of IL-23 signaling than ustekinumab and tildrakizumab. Risankizumab and guselkumab completely blocked the binding of IL-23 to IL-23Rα as expected, whereas tildrakizumab did not. In vitro, risankizumab and guselkumab blocked the terminal differentiation of TH17 cells in a similar manner, while tildrakizumab had minimal impact on TH17 differentiation. In a human IL-23-induced ear-swelling mouse model, risankizumab and guselkumab were more effective than ustekinumab and tildrakizumab at reducing IL-17, IL-22, and keratinocyte gene expression. Our results indicate that the four clinically approved antibodies targeting IL-23 differ in affinity and binding epitope. These attributes contribute to differences in in vitro potency, receptor interaction inhibition mode and in vivo efficacy in preclinical studies as described in this report, and similarly may affect the clinical performance of these drugs.

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