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Pharmacological modulation of GITRL/GITR system: Therapeutic perspectives

TitoloPharmacological modulation of GITRL/GITR system: Therapeutic perspectives
Tipo di pubblicazioneArticolo su Rivista peer-reviewed
Anno di Pubblicazione2012
AutoriNocentini, Giuseppe, Ronchetti Simona, Petrillo Maria Grazia, and Riccardi Carlo
RivistaBritish Journal of Pharmacology
Volume165
Paginazione2089 – 2099
Type of ArticleReview
ISSN14765381
Parole chiaveAnimals, Antibodies, antiinflammatory activity, B lymphocyte, CD28 antigen, CD4+ T lymphocyte, CD8+ T lymphocyte, dimer, dimerization, disease model, drug cytotoxicity, drug mechanism, drug receptor binding, Gag protein, glucocorticoid induced tumor necrosis factor receptor, glucocorticoid induced tumor necrosis factor receptor antibody, glucocorticoid induced tumor necrosis factor receptor G3c antibody, glucocorticoid induced tumor necrosis factor receptor immunoglobulin Fc fragment, glucocorticoid induced tumor necrosis factor receptor ligand, Glucocorticoid-Induced TNFR-Related Protein, Graft Survival, graft versus host reaction, human, Humans, immune response, Immunological, Immunomodulation, immunopharmacology, immunostimulation, Ligands, lymphocyte proliferation, Mice, Models, Monoclonal, Monoclonal antibody, monomer, natural killer T cell, nonhuman, oligomerization, orthology, priority journal, protein cross linking, protein expression, protein function, protein protein interaction, Protein Structure, receptor antibody, regulatory T lymphocyte, review, signal transduction, Species Specificity, T lymphocyte, T lymphocyte activation, T lymphocyte subpopulation, T-Lymphocytes, transcription factor FOXP3, tumor necrosis factor receptor associated factor 2, Tumor Necrosis Factors, tumor rejection, unclassified drug, upregulation
Abstract

Glucocorticoid-induced TNFR-related (gitr) is a gene coding for a member of the TNF receptor superfamily. GITR activation by its ligand (GITRL) influences the activity of effector and regulatory T cells, thus participating in the development of immune response against tumours and infectious agents, as well as in autoimmune and inflammatory diseases. Notably, treating animals with GITR-Fc fusion protein ameliorates autoimmune/inflammatory diseases while GITR triggering, by treatment with anti-GITR mAb, is effective in treating viral, bacterial and parasitic infections, as well in boosting immune response against tumours. GITR modulation has been indicated as one of the top 25 most promising research areas by the American National Cancer Institute, and a clinical trial testing the efficacy of an anti-GITR mAb in melanoma patients has been started. In this review, we summarize results regarding: (i) the mechanisms by which GITRL/GITR system modulates immune response; (ii) the structural and functional studies clearly demonstrating differences between GITRL/GITR systems of mice and humans; (iii) the molecules with pharmacological activities including anti-GITR mAbs, GITR-Fc and GITRL-Fc fusion proteins, GITRL in monomer or multimer conformation; and (iv) the possible risks deriving from GITRL/GITR system pharmacological modulation. In conclusion, GITR triggering and inhibition could be useful in treating tumours, infectious diseases, as well as autoimmune and inflammatory diseases. However, differences between mouse and human GITRL/GITR systems suggest that further preclinical studies are needed to better understand how safe therapeutic results can be obtained and to design appropriate clinical trials. © 2011 The Authors. British Journal of Pharmacology.

Note

Cited by: 74; All Open Access, Green Open Access

URLhttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84858236143&doi=10.1111%2fj.1476-5381.2011.01753.x&partnerID=40&md5=af3ce378d838553c890df17c4edd8f24
DOI10.1111/j.1476-5381.2011.01753.x
Citation KeyNocentini20122089
PubMed ID22029729