Insights into the multifaceted role of interleukin-37 on human immune cell regulation
Clinical Immunology, 2024
Teufel L., Matzaraki V., Folkman L., ter Horst R., Moorlag S., Mulders-Manders C., Netea M., Krausgruber T., Joosten L., Arts R.
Disease area | Application area | Sample type | Products |
---|---|---|---|
Immunological & Inflammatory Diseases | Pathophysiology | Plasma | Olink Target 96 |
Abstract
Autoinflammatory diseases, while having a variety of underlying causes, are mediated by dysfunctional innate immune responses. Therefore, standard treatments target innate cytokines or block their receptors. Despite excellent responses in some patients, first-line treatments fail in others, for reasons which remain to be understood.
We studied the effects of IL-37, an anti-inflammatory cytokine, on immune cells using multi-omics profiling of 325 healthy adults. Our findings show that IL-37 is associated with inflammation control and generally reduced immune cell activity. Further, genetic variants in IL37 are associated with impaired trained immunity, a memory phenotype of innate immune cells contributing to autoinflammation. To underpin the medical potential of IL-37, an explorative cohort of seven autoinflammatory disorders was built. In vitro stimulation experiments argue for recombinant IL-37 as a potential therapy in IL-6-, and IL-22-driven conditions.
Concluding, IL-37 is highlighted as a cytokine with broad anti-inflammatory functions, implicating its potential as therapeutic intervention.