Treatment of Knee Osteoarthritis via Intra-articular Delivery of an Immunosuppressive Enzyme

NIH RePORTER · NIH · R01 · $651,908 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

Project Summary In osteoarthritis (OA), intra-articular inflammation is a key mediator of joint destruction and chronic joint pain. Unfortunately, current strategies to control joint inflammation have largely failed. To address this challenge, our team is developing an innovative metabolic reprogramming strategy for the treatment of knee OA. In our strategy, indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase (IDO), an immunosupressive enzyme, will be intra-articularly delivered to catabolize tryptophan into kynurenines. Based on IDO’s effect in other tissues, this redirection of tryptophan metabolism will likely drive the polarization of joint-level immune cells toward an anti-inflammatory state. Importantly, our strategy differs from other intra-articular delivery strategies for protein and synthetic drugs, as our enzyme will continuously produce anti-inflammatory metabolites in the OA-affected joint and thereby create prolonged anti-inflammatory effects that potentially reset immune homeostasis in the joint. However, while IDO can continuously produce anti-inflammatory metabolites, free IDO is subject to joint clearance. To address this challenge, we will also fuse IDO to a carbohydrate-binding protein, thereby extending IDO’s joint residence time via a novel tissue anchoring approach. Morever, because tissue-anchored IDO does not need to release to generate anti-inflammatory signals, the anchored IDO will continue to produce anti-inflammatory kyneurenines without the need for our ‘drug’ (IDO) to release and bind a specific target. Our preliminary data demonstrate that tryptophan metabolism is altered in both human OA and rodent models, our tissue anchoring strategy can extend the residence time of an enzyme from a few days to over 4 weeks, and that intra-articular delivery of an IDO fusion protein can shift tryptophan metabolism, reduce inflammation, and reverse pain-related behaviors in a rat knee OA model. As such, this R01 proposal seeks to evaluate intra-articular delivery of an IDO fusion protein as a therapeutic strategy to control joint inflammation and reduce OA-related pathological remodeling after trauma (Aim 1) and after the onset of chronic OA symptoms (Aim 2). To achieve these aims, our team will integrate expertise in metabolic profiling, immune engineering, joint histology, and rodent behavioral analyses. Specifically, this R01 will address the following scientific questions: 1) How is joint metabolism altered by intra- articular delivery of an IDO fusion protein? 2) How is the local regulation of the immune system within the joint altered by an intra-articular injection of an IDO fusion protein? 3) Do IDO-induced metabolic shifts affect other joint tissues as well? 4) Can intra-articular injection of an IDO fusion protein stall the onset of post-traumatic OA after medial meniscus injury? and, 5) Can intra-articular delivery of an IDO fusion protein reverse OA-related pain and disability, even in the context of irreparable joint damage? Answering the...

Key facts

NIH application ID
10466325
Project number
1R01AR079874-01A1
Recipient
UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA
Principal Investigator
Kyle D Allen
Activity code
R01
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2022
Award amount
$651,908
Award type
1
Project period
2022-04-01 → 2027-03-31