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Intravenous immune globulin suppresses angiogenesis in mice and humans

Human intravenous immune globulin (IVIg), a purified IgG fraction composed of ~60% IgG1 and obtained from the pooled plasma of thousands of donors, is clinically used for a wide range of diseases. The biological actions of IVIg are incompletely understood and have been attributed both to the polyclo...

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Autores principales: Yasuma, Reo, Cicatiello, Valeria, Mizutani, Takeshi, Tudisco, Laura, Kim, Younghee, Tarallo, Valeria, Bogdanovich, Sasha, Hirano, Yoshio, Kerur, Nagaraj, Li, Shengjian, Yasuma, Tetsuhiro, Fowler, Benjamin J, Wright, Charles B, Apicella, Ivana, Greco, Adelaide, Brunetti, Arturo, Ambati, Balamurali K, Helmers, Sevim Barbasso, Lundberg, Ingrid E, Viklicky, Ondrej, Leusen, Jeanette HW, Verbeek, J Sjef, Gelfand, Bradley D, Bastos-Carvalho, Ana, De Falco, Sandro, Ambati, Jayakrishna
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Nature Publishing Group 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4768485/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26925256
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/sigtrans.2015.2
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author Yasuma, Reo
Cicatiello, Valeria
Mizutani, Takeshi
Tudisco, Laura
Kim, Younghee
Tarallo, Valeria
Bogdanovich, Sasha
Hirano, Yoshio
Kerur, Nagaraj
Li, Shengjian
Yasuma, Tetsuhiro
Fowler, Benjamin J
Wright, Charles B
Apicella, Ivana
Greco, Adelaide
Brunetti, Arturo
Ambati, Balamurali K
Helmers, Sevim Barbasso
Lundberg, Ingrid E
Viklicky, Ondrej
Leusen, Jeanette HW
Verbeek, J Sjef
Gelfand, Bradley D
Bastos-Carvalho, Ana
De Falco, Sandro
Ambati, Jayakrishna
author_facet Yasuma, Reo
Cicatiello, Valeria
Mizutani, Takeshi
Tudisco, Laura
Kim, Younghee
Tarallo, Valeria
Bogdanovich, Sasha
Hirano, Yoshio
Kerur, Nagaraj
Li, Shengjian
Yasuma, Tetsuhiro
Fowler, Benjamin J
Wright, Charles B
Apicella, Ivana
Greco, Adelaide
Brunetti, Arturo
Ambati, Balamurali K
Helmers, Sevim Barbasso
Lundberg, Ingrid E
Viklicky, Ondrej
Leusen, Jeanette HW
Verbeek, J Sjef
Gelfand, Bradley D
Bastos-Carvalho, Ana
De Falco, Sandro
Ambati, Jayakrishna
author_sort Yasuma, Reo
collection PubMed
description Human intravenous immune globulin (IVIg), a purified IgG fraction composed of ~60% IgG1 and obtained from the pooled plasma of thousands of donors, is clinically used for a wide range of diseases. The biological actions of IVIg are incompletely understood and have been attributed both to the polyclonal antibodies therein and also to their IgG (IgG) Fc regions. Recently, we demonstrated that multiple therapeutic human IgG1 antibodies suppress angiogenesis in a target-independent manner via FcγRI, a high-affinity receptor for IgG1. Here we show that IVIg possesses similar anti-angiogenic activity and inhibited blood vessel growth in five different mouse models of prevalent human diseases, namely, neovascular age-related macular degeneration, corneal neovascularization, colorectal cancer, fibrosarcoma and peripheral arterial ischemic disease. Angioinhibition was mediated by the Fc region of IVIg, required FcγRI and had similar potency in transgenic mice expressing human FcγRs. Finally, IVIg therapy administered to humans for the treatment of inflammatory or autoimmune diseases reduced kidney and muscle blood vessel densities. These data place IVIg, an agent approved by the US Food and Drug Administration, as a novel angioinhibitory drug in doses that are currently administered in the clinical setting. In addition, they raise the possibility of an unintended effect of IVIg on blood vessels.
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spelling pubmed-47684852016-02-26 Intravenous immune globulin suppresses angiogenesis in mice and humans Yasuma, Reo Cicatiello, Valeria Mizutani, Takeshi Tudisco, Laura Kim, Younghee Tarallo, Valeria Bogdanovich, Sasha Hirano, Yoshio Kerur, Nagaraj Li, Shengjian Yasuma, Tetsuhiro Fowler, Benjamin J Wright, Charles B Apicella, Ivana Greco, Adelaide Brunetti, Arturo Ambati, Balamurali K Helmers, Sevim Barbasso Lundberg, Ingrid E Viklicky, Ondrej Leusen, Jeanette HW Verbeek, J Sjef Gelfand, Bradley D Bastos-Carvalho, Ana De Falco, Sandro Ambati, Jayakrishna Signal Transduct Target Ther Article Human intravenous immune globulin (IVIg), a purified IgG fraction composed of ~60% IgG1 and obtained from the pooled plasma of thousands of donors, is clinically used for a wide range of diseases. The biological actions of IVIg are incompletely understood and have been attributed both to the polyclonal antibodies therein and also to their IgG (IgG) Fc regions. Recently, we demonstrated that multiple therapeutic human IgG1 antibodies suppress angiogenesis in a target-independent manner via FcγRI, a high-affinity receptor for IgG1. Here we show that IVIg possesses similar anti-angiogenic activity and inhibited blood vessel growth in five different mouse models of prevalent human diseases, namely, neovascular age-related macular degeneration, corneal neovascularization, colorectal cancer, fibrosarcoma and peripheral arterial ischemic disease. Angioinhibition was mediated by the Fc region of IVIg, required FcγRI and had similar potency in transgenic mice expressing human FcγRs. Finally, IVIg therapy administered to humans for the treatment of inflammatory or autoimmune diseases reduced kidney and muscle blood vessel densities. These data place IVIg, an agent approved by the US Food and Drug Administration, as a novel angioinhibitory drug in doses that are currently administered in the clinical setting. In addition, they raise the possibility of an unintended effect of IVIg on blood vessels. Nature Publishing Group 2016-01-28 /pmc/articles/PMC4768485/ /pubmed/26925256 http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/sigtrans.2015.2 Text en Copyright © 2016 West China Hospital, Sichuan University http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article’s Creative Commons license, unless indicated otherwise in the credit line; if the material is not included under the Creative Commons license, users will need to obtain permission from the license holder to reproduce the material. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
spellingShingle Article
Yasuma, Reo
Cicatiello, Valeria
Mizutani, Takeshi
Tudisco, Laura
Kim, Younghee
Tarallo, Valeria
Bogdanovich, Sasha
Hirano, Yoshio
Kerur, Nagaraj
Li, Shengjian
Yasuma, Tetsuhiro
Fowler, Benjamin J
Wright, Charles B
Apicella, Ivana
Greco, Adelaide
Brunetti, Arturo
Ambati, Balamurali K
Helmers, Sevim Barbasso
Lundberg, Ingrid E
Viklicky, Ondrej
Leusen, Jeanette HW
Verbeek, J Sjef
Gelfand, Bradley D
Bastos-Carvalho, Ana
De Falco, Sandro
Ambati, Jayakrishna
Intravenous immune globulin suppresses angiogenesis in mice and humans
title Intravenous immune globulin suppresses angiogenesis in mice and humans
title_full Intravenous immune globulin suppresses angiogenesis in mice and humans
title_fullStr Intravenous immune globulin suppresses angiogenesis in mice and humans
title_full_unstemmed Intravenous immune globulin suppresses angiogenesis in mice and humans
title_short Intravenous immune globulin suppresses angiogenesis in mice and humans
title_sort intravenous immune globulin suppresses angiogenesis in mice and humans
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4768485/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26925256
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/sigtrans.2015.2
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