RESUMEN
Interleukin (IL)-33 has been shown to centrally regulate, among other processes, inflammation and fibrosis. Both intracellular full-length (FLIL33) precursor and extracellular mature cytokine (MIL33) forms exert such regulation, albeit differentially. Drug development efforts to target the IL-33 pathway have focused mostly on MIL33 and its specific cell-surface receptor, ST2, with limited attempts to negotiate the pathophysiological contributions from FLIL33. Furthermore, even a successful strategy for targeting MIL33 effects would arguably benefit from a simultaneous attenuation of the levels of FLIL33, which remains the continuous source of MIL33 supply. We therefore sought to develop an approach to depleting FLIL33 protein levels. We previously reported that the steady-state levels of FLIL33 are controlled in part through its proteasomal degradation and that such regulation can be mapped to a segment in the N-terminal portion of FLIL33. We hypothesized that disruption of this regulation would lead to a decrease in FLIL33 levels, thus inducing a beneficial therapeutic effect in an IL-33-dependent pathology. To test this hypothesis, we designed and tested cell-permeable decoy peptides (CPDPs) which mimic the target N-terminal FLIL33 region. We argued that such mimic peptides would compete with FLIL33 for the components of the native FLIL33 production and maintenance molecular machinery. Administered in the therapeutic regimen to bleomycin-challenged mice, the tested CPDPs alleviated the overall severity of the disease by restoring body weight loss and attenuating accumulation of collagen in the lungs. This proof-of-principle study lays the foundation for future work towards the development of this prospective therapeutic approach. Significance Statement An antifibrotic therapeutic approach is proposed and preclinically tested in mice in vivo based on targeting the full-length IL-33 precursor protein. Peptide fusion constructs consisted of a cell-permeable sequence fused with a sequence mimicking an N-terminal segment of IL-33 precursor that is responsible for this protein's stability. Systemic administration of such peptides to mice in either the acute intratracheal or chronic systemic bleomycin challenge models leads to a decrease in the bleomycin-induced elevations of pulmonary IL-33 and collagen.