Department of Medicine, University of Colorado School of Medicine, Aurora, CO, USA.
Adv Exp Med Biol. 2013;735:137-54. doi: 10.1007/978-1-4614-4118-2_9.
Recent approval of the first human complement pathway-directed therapeutics, along with high-profile genetic association studies, has catalyzed renewed biopharmaceutical interest in developing drugs that modulate the complement system. Substantial challenges remain, however, that must be overcome before widespread application of complement inhibitors in inflammatory and autoimmune diseases becomes possible. Among these challenges are the following: (1) defining the complement pathways and effector mechanisms that cause tissue injury in humans and determining whether the relative importance of each varies by disease, (2) blocking or modulating, using traditional small molecule or biologic approaches, the function of complement proteins whose circulating levels are very high and whose turnover rates are relatively rapid, especially in the setting of acute and chronic autoimmune diseases, and (3) avoiding infectious complications or impairment of other important physiological functions of complement when using systemically active complement-blocking agents. This chapter will review data that address these challenges to therapeutic development, with a focus on the development of a novel strategy of blocking specific complement pathways by targeting inhibitors using a recombinant portion of the human complement receptor type 2 (CR2/CD21) which specifically targets to sites of local complement C3 activation where C3 fragments are covalently fixed. Recently, the first of these CR2-targeted proteins has entered human phase I studies in the human disease paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria. The results of murine translational studies using CR2-targeted inhibitors strongly suggest that a guiding principle going forward in complement therapeutic development may well be to focus on developing strategies to modulate the pathway as precisely as possible by physically localizing therapeutic inhibitory effects.
最近,第一批靶向人类补体途径的治疗药物获得批准,再加上备受瞩目的遗传关联研究,这促使人们重新对开发调节补体系统的药物产生了浓厚兴趣。然而,在炎症和自身免疫性疾病中广泛应用补体抑制剂之前,仍然存在许多必须克服的重大挑战。这些挑战包括以下几个方面:(1)确定在人类中引起组织损伤的补体途径和效应机制,并确定每种机制在不同疾病中的相对重要性;(2)使用传统的小分子或生物方法,阻断或调节循环水平非常高且周转率相对较快的补体蛋白的功能,尤其是在急性和慢性自身免疫性疾病的情况下;(3)在使用全身性活性补体阻断剂时,避免感染并发症或损害补体的其他重要生理功能。本章将回顾解决这些治疗开发挑战的数据,重点介绍通过使用靶向人补体受体 2(CR2/CD21)的重组部分来靶向抑制剂的新型阻断特定补体途径的策略,该策略专门针对局部补体 C3 激活部位,其中 C3 片段被共价固定。最近,这些 CR2 靶向蛋白中的第一种已进入阵发性夜间血红蛋白尿症的人体 I 期研究。使用 CR2 靶向抑制剂进行的转化研究的结果强烈表明,在补体治疗开发中向前推进的指导原则可能是通过物理定位治疗抑制作用,尽可能精确地调节途径。