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Cynomolgus monkey model of interleukin-31-induced scratching depicts blockade of human interleukin-31 receptor A by a humanized monoclonal antibody.

Sohei OyamaHidetomo KitamuraTaichi KuramochiYoshinobu HiguchiHiroaki MatsushitaTsukasa SuzukiMasaaki GotoHideki AdachiKeiko KasutaniAkihisa SakamotoYuki IwayanagiAkihisa KanekoMasahiko NanamiEtsuko FujiiKeiko EsakiYoshiaki TakashimaShin ShimaokaKunihiro HattoriYoshiki Kawabe
Published in: Experimental dermatology (2017)
Scratching is an important factor exacerbating skin lesions through the so-called itch-scratch cycle in atopic dermatitis (AD). In mice, interleukin (IL)-31 and its receptor IL-31 receptor A (IL-31RA) are known to play a critical role in pruritus and the pathogenesis of AD; however, study of their precise roles in primates is hindered by the low sequence homologies between primates and mice and the lack of direct evidence of itch sensation by IL-31 in primates. We showed that administration of cynomolgus IL-31 induces transient scratching behaviour in cynomolgus monkeys and by that were able to establish a monkey model of scratching. We then showed that a single subcutaneous injection of 1 mg/kg nemolizumab, a humanized anti-human IL-31RA monoclonal antibody that also neutralizes cynomolgus IL-31 signalling and shows a good pharmacokinetic profile in cynomolgus monkeys, suppressed the IL-31-induced scratching for about 2 months. These results suggest that the IL-31 axis and IL-31RA axis play as critical a role in the induction of scratching in primates as in mice and that the blockade of IL-31 signalling by an anti-human IL-31RA antibody is a promising therapeutic approach for treatment of AD. Nemolizumab is currently under investigation in clinical trials.
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