Litcius/Paper detail

A Small-Molecule Inhibitor to the Cytokine Interleukin-4

Sean P. Quinnell, Becky Leifer, Stephen T. Nestor, Kelly Tan, Daniel F. Sheehy, Luke M. Ceo, Shelby K. Doyle, Angela N. Koehler, Arturo J. Vegas

2020ACS Chemical Biology17 citationsDOI

Abstract

Interleukin-4 (IL-4) is a multifunctional cytokine and an important regulator of inflammation. When deregulated, IL-4 activity is associated with asthma, allergic inflammation, and multiple types of cancer. While antibody-based inhibitors targeting the soluble cytokine have been evaluated clinically, they failed to achieve their end points in trials. Small-molecule inhibitors are an attractive alternative, but identifying effective chemotypes that inhibit the protein-protein interactions between cytokines and their receptors remains an active area of research. As a result, no small-molecule inhibitors to the soluble IL-4 cytokine have yet been reported. Here, we describe the first IL-4 small-molecule inhibitor identified and characterized through a combination of binding-based approaches and cell-based activity assays. The compound features a nicotinonitrile scaffold with micromolar affinity and potency for the cytokine and disrupts type II IL-4 signaling in cells. Small-molecule inhibitors of these important cell-signaling proteins have implications for numerous immune-related disorders and inform future drug discovery and design efforts for these challenging protein targets.

Topics & Concepts

CytokineSmall moleculeImmune systemBiologyInflammationDrug discoveryCell biologyChemistryImmunologyBiochemistryCytokine Signaling Pathways and InteractionsMonoclonal and Polyclonal Antibodies ResearchImmune Cell Function and Interaction