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April
20, 2004
UCSD Develops Rheumatoid Arthritis
Therapy
That Re-Educates Body's Immune Response
By Sue Pondrom
A promising new
therapy for rheumatoid arthritis (RA) developed by researchers
at the University of California, San Diego (UCSD) School of
Medicine re-educates the body's immune system to prevent an
attack against healthy joint tissue.
In patients with RA, the immune system that is supposed to protect
the body, instead attacks it for unknown reasons. In a Phase
I/IIa clinical trial recently described in Proceedings of the
National Academy of Sciences*, the UCSD researchers
report that a peptide called dnaJP1, taken orally for six months
by a group of patients with early RA, caused no side effects
and actually changed the action of the immune system's T cells,
preventing them from attacking the body's own tissues
The new therapy is currently in Phase II clinical trials with
160 RA patients at UCSD, Johns Hopkins University, the Mayo
Clinic, and Virginia Mason Medical Center in Seattle. It is
expected to be completed by the end of 2004, with enrollment
still open for interested study participants.
RA is a chronic, painful disease that causes joint inflammation
and destruction, progressive disability and premature death.
Affecting an estimated 2.1 million Americans, RA causes substantial
economic burden, with 50 percent of patients unable to work
within 10 years of onset, and lifetime costs of the disease
rivaling those of coronary artery disease or stroke.**
RA is incurable, with most therapy focused on symptom relief.
Unfortunately, current therapies can have serious side effects
and work by suppressing the immune system, which increases the
risk of infection.
While the precise cause
of the disease is unknown, researchers believe that RA is influenced
by an abnormal reaction to environmental factors such as infection,
which initiate the autoimmune response in genetically susceptible
individuals.
The immune-modulation
therapy developed by Salvatore Albani, M.D., Ph.D., UCSD professor
of medicine and pediatrics, takes advantage of both the genetic
and environmental components of RA. In studies over the past
12 years, he has focused on the immune system's T cells, which
trigger inflammation to kill and clear foreign pathogens from
the body. Albani reasoned that if the immune system of RA patients
could be altered, T cells might be less likely to cause chronic
inflammation.
His research involved
several components of the immune response, beginning with a
sequence of amino acids (segments that comprise proteins) expressed
on the surface of cells during an immune response. Called a
human leukocyte antigen (HLA), this sequence is designed to
recognize self- from non-self cells. In a normal immune response,
HLA acts as a "natural dimmer" to prevent over-stimulation
of the inflammatory response. In RA patients, however, the dimmer
is broken and excessive inflammation ravages tissue and joints.
Interestingly, researchers have determined that 70 percent of
RA patients, and not normal individuals, share a specific sequence
of five amino acids within their HLA.
Albani's current findings
were further supported by previous studies he conducted with
Dennis Carson, M.D., UCSD professor of medicine and director
of the Sam and Rose Stein Institute on Aging at UCSD, that showed
immune-system T cells in RA patients become confused by the
body's natural HLA sequence on cell surfaces, thinking it is
a foreign invader. In an attempt to protect the body, the T
cells attack the HLA sequence by inducing inflammation.
To prevent T cells
from attacking the body's own HLA sequence, Albani sought to
develop a vaccine therapy that could re-educate the diseased
immune system in RA patients to prevent rampant inflammation.
He focused on a naturally occurring protein called dnaJ that
is used by T cells to help initiate the inflammation process.
A section of the dnaJ protein, called dnaJP1, contains the same
sequence of five amino acids as those within the HLA of RA patients.
Bacterial, non-human forms of the dnaJP1 peptide also contained
the same sequence of RA-susceptible HLA amino acids, and were
found by the UCSD team to be targets of pro-inflammatory T cell
responses in RA patients.
"Therefore, we
believed that if we could administer the bacterial dnaJP1 as
a vaccine to patients with early RA, it would affect the autoimmune
inflammation," Albani said. "A key to the treatment
was oral administration of dnaJP1."
The researchers determined
that an injection of dnaJP1 caused a typical RA-inflammatory
immune response, because T cells recognize the peptide as a
foreign invader. When the peptide was ingested by patients,
however, the special properties of the digestive system's mucosal
cells recognized dnaJP1 as a "self-peptide," rather
than foreign, and tolerated it. It's the same mechanism the
digestive system uses with food, which is also a foreign invader
to the body. The mucosal system is designed to tolerate the
food, or medications, that enter the body in this manner.
"In essence, we
re-educated the immune system T cells in RA patients to be tolerant
of the dnaJP1 amino acid sequence that would usually trigger
inflammation," Albani said. "In turn, the immune system
became tolerant of the HLA sequence, thus avoiding a T cell
attack against the body's own tissue."
He added that "the
findings with dnaJP1 offer a strategy and the tools to develop
a new therapy for RA that focuses on immune modulation rather
than immune suppression."
Immune modulation may
be particularly helpful in delaying, or possibly abolishing
the need for RA patients to take currently available drugs called
disease modifying antiarthritic drugs (DMARDs), which provide
significant improvements in RA but have potentially serious
side effects such as skin rash; mouth sores; stomach, eye and
kidney problems; and low blood counts.
The University of California
has licensed to Androclus Therapeutics, a biotechnology company
located in Milan, Italy and San Diego, California, exclusive
rights to further develop a new therapy based on these discoveries
In addition to Albani,
authors of the paper in Proceedings of the National Academy
of Sciences were first author Berent J. Prakken, M.D., Ph.D.,
UCSD Departments of Medicine and Pediatrics and IACOPO Institute
for Translational Medicine; and Rodrigo Samodal, M.D., Tho D.
Le, M.S., Francesca Giannoni, M.S., Gisella Puga Yung, M.S.,
John Scavulli, M.D., Diane Amox, R.N., Sarah Roord, M.D., Isme
de Kleer, M.D., Dustan Bonnin, M.S., Charles Berry, Ph.D., and
Margherita Massa, Ph.D., UCSD Departments of Medicine and Pediatrics
and IACOPO Institute for Translational Medicine; and Paola Lanza,
M.S. and Rosario Billetta, M.S., Androclus Therapeutics, Milan,
Italy and San Diego, California. Prakken, Roord, and de Kleer
are also affiliated with the Department of Pediatric Immunology,
University Medical Center Utrecht, The Netherlands. Massa is
also affiliated with Istituo de Ricovero e Cura a Carattere
Scientifico, Pavia, Italy. Albani is affiliated with Androclus
Therapeutics.
The Phase
I study was funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH),
the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences, and the
Dutch Organization for Scientific Research. The current Phase
II trial is funded by the NIH.
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* Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences,
March 23, 2004, Vol. 101, No. 12, pages 4228-4233.
** Journal of the American Medical Association,
Vol. 285, No. 5, Feb. 7, 2001, pages 648-650.
Media Contact:
Sue Pondrom (619) 543-6163
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