Prolonged pharmacological inhibition of cathepsin C results in elimination of neutrophil serine proteases
Author
MARCHAND-ADAM, Sylvain
GUARINO, Carla
HAMON, Yveline
CROIX, Cecile
LAMORT, Anne-Sophie
DALLET-CHOISY, Sandrine
LESNER, Adam
BARANEK, Thomas
VIAUD-MASSUARD, Marie-Claude
LAURITZEN, Conni
PEDERSEN, John
HEUZE-VOURC'H, Nathalie
SI-TAHAR, Mustapha
JENNE, Dieter E.
GAUTHIER, Francis
HORWITZ, Marshall S.
BORREGAARD, Niels
KORKMAZ, Brice
Firatli, Erhan
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Cathepsin C (CatC) is a tetrameric cysteine dipeptidyl aminopeptidase that plays a key role in activation of pro-inflammatory serine protease zymogens by removal of a N-terminal pro-dipeptide sequence. Loss of function mutations in the CatC gene is associated with lack of immune cell serine protease activities and cause Papillon-Lefevre syndrome (PLS). Also, only very low levels of elastase-like protease zymogens are detected by proteome analysis of neutrophils from PLS patients. Thus, CatC inhibitors represent new alternatives for the treatment of neutrophil protease-driven inflammatory or autoimmune diseases. We aimed to experimentally inactivate and lower neutrophil elastase-like proteases by pharmacological blocking of CatC-dependent maturation in cell-based assays and in vivo. Isolated, immature bone marrow cells from healthy donors pulse-chased in the presence of a new cell permeable cyclopropyl nitrile CatC inhibitor almost totally lack elastase. We confirmed the elimination of neutrophil elastase-like proteases by prolonged inhibition of CatC in a non-human primate. We also showed that neutrophils lacking elastase-like protease activities were still recruited to inflammatory sites. These preclinical results demonstrate that the disappearance of neutrophil elastase-like proteases as observed in PLS patients can be achieved by pharmacological inhibition of bone marrow CatC. Such a transitory inhibition of CatC might thus help to rebalance the protease load during chronic inflammatory diseases, which opens new perspectives for therapeutic applications in humans. (C) 2017 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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