Endothelial eNAMPT amplifies pre-clinical acute lung injury: efficacy of an eNAMPT-neutralising monoclonal antibody

Author:

Quijada Hector,Bermudez Tadeo,Kempf Carrie L.,Valera Daniel G.,Garcia Alexander N.,Camp Sara M.,Song Jin H.,Franco Evelyn,Burt Jessica K.,Sun Belinda,Mascarenhas Joseph B.,Burns Kimberlie,Gaber Amir,Oita Radu C.,Reyes Hernon Vivian,Barber Christy,Moreno-Vinasco Liliana,Sun Xiaoguang,Cress Anne E.,Martin Diego,Liu Zhonglin,Desai Ankit A.,Natarajan Viswanathan,Jacobson Jeffrey R.,Dudek Steven M.,Bime Christian,Sammani Saad,Garcia Joe G.N.

Abstract

RationaleThe severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2/coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic has highlighted the serious unmet need for effective therapies that reduce acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) mortality. We explored whether extracellular nicotinamide phosphoribosyltransferase (eNAMPT), a ligand for Toll-like receptor (TLR)4 and a master regulator of innate immunity and inflammation, is a potential ARDS therapeutic target.MethodsWild-type C57BL/6J or endothelial cell (EC)-cNAMPT−/− knockout mice (targeted EC NAMPT deletion) were exposed to either a lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-induced (“one-hit”) or a combined LPS/ventilator (“two-hit”)-induced acute inflammatory lung injury model. A NAMPT-specific monoclonal antibody (mAb) imaging probe (99mTc-ProNamptor) was used to detect NAMPT expression in lung tissues. Either an eNAMPT-neutralising goat polyclonal antibody (pAb) or a humanised monoclonal antibody (ALT-100 mAb) were used in vitro and in vivo.ResultsImmunohistochemical, biochemical and imaging studies validated time-dependent increases in NAMPT lung tissue expression in both pre-clinical ARDS models. Intravenous delivery of either eNAMPT-neutralising pAb or mAb significantly attenuated inflammatory lung injury (haematoxylin and eosin staining, bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) protein, BAL polymorphonuclear cells, plasma interleukin-6) in both pre-clinical models. In vitro human lung EC studies demonstrated eNAMPT-neutralising antibodies (pAb, mAb) to strongly abrogate eNAMPT-induced TLR4 pathway activation and EC barrier disruption. In vivo studies in wild-type and EC-cNAMPT−/− mice confirmed a highly significant contribution of EC-derived NAMPT to the severity of inflammatory lung injury in both pre-clinical ARDS models.ConclusionsThese findings highlight both the role of EC-derived eNAMPT and the potential for biologic targeting of the eNAMPT/TLR4 inflammatory pathway. In combination with predictive eNAMPT biomarker and NAMPT genotyping assays, this offers the opportunity to identify high-risk ARDS subjects for delivery of personalised medicine.

Funder

National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute

Publisher

European Respiratory Society (ERS)

Subject

Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine

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