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Science & Technology

An autonomous activation of interleukin-17 receptor signaling sustains inflammation and promotes disease progression

Recently, Professor Xu Qiang and his team from the School of Life Sciences made new progress in interleukin and published a research paper titled “An autonomous activation of interleukin-17 receptor signaling sustains inflammation and promotes disease progression” on ImmunityProfessor Xu is the corresponding author of this paper, and Research Associate Luo Qiong, also from the School of Life Sciences, is the first author and co-corresponding author.

The abstract of the paper is as following:

Anti-interleukin-17 (IL-17) therapy has been used in various autoimmune diseases. However, the efficacy is unexpectedly limited in several IL-17-associated diseases, and the mechanism of limited efficacy remains unclear. Here, we show that a molecular complex containing the adaptor molecule Act1 and tyrosine phosphatase SHP2 mediated autonomous IL-17R signaling that accelerated and sustained inflammation. SHP2, aberrantly augmented in various autoimmune diseases, was induced by IL-17A itself in astrocytes and keratinocytes, sustaining chemokine production even upon anti-IL-17 therapies. Mechanistically, SHP2 directly interacted with and dephosphorylated Act1, which replaced Act1-TRAF5 complexes and induced IL-17-independent activation of IL-17R signaling. Genetic or pharmacologic inactivation of SHP2, or blocking Act1-SHP2 interaction, paralyzed both IL-17-induced and IL-17-independent signaling and attenuated primary or relapsing experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis. Therefore, Act1-SHP2 complexes mediate an alternative pathway for autonomous activation of IL-17R signaling, targeting which could be a therapeutic option for IL-17-related diseases in addition to current antibody therapies.


Editors: Guo Ankang, Li Jiesheng