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IL-36 signaling as a drug target in Crohn's disease patients with IL36RN mutations

Authors

  • J. Hecker
  • C. Plattner
  • C.A. Cancino
  • B.S. Löscher
  • J. Saurenbach
  • M. Letizia
  • D. Rieder
  • I. Freise
  • K. Koop
  • C. Neufert
  • D. Kunkel
  • Z. Al Khatim
  • L.A. Schaafs
  • A. Schütz
  • C. Becker
  • R. Atreya
  • Z. Trajanoski
  • A. Franke
  • E. Sonnenberg
  • A.N. Hegazy
  • B. Siegmund
  • C. Weidinger

Journal

  • EMBO Molecular Medicine

Citation

  • EMBO Mol Med

Abstract

  • The IL-36 signaling pathway has recently been identified as a key regulator of intestinal homeostasis and inflammation. However, the role of mutations in the IL-36R signaling pathway in the pathogenesis of inflammatory bowel disease remains unclear. We here identified four Crohn’s disease patients with heterozygous missense mutations in the IL-36 receptor antagonist (IL36RN, IL-36RA). Experimental overexpression and functional assays demonstrated that two identified mutations resulted in reduced expression of IL-36RA. In-depth immune profiling of one IL36RN-mutated patient revealed an increased response of PBMCs to IL-36 stimulation and elevated serum levels of IL-36-regulated cytokines. Administration of the IL-36R-blocking antibody spesolimab to this patient resulted in a reduction of intestinal inflammation and alterations in immune cell composition and function. Our findings indicate that pathogenic IL36RN mutations may contribute to the pathogenesis of Crohn’s disease in a subset of patients and that inhibiting IL-36 signaling could offer a personalized therapeutic approach for these patients.


DOI

doi:10.1038/s44321-025-00245-z