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Serum albumin-fused interleukin-10 prevents neuroinflammation by promoting immunoregulation in the secondary lymphoid organs and limiting immune cell infiltration in the spinal cord.

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bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology 2026 OA Multiple Sclerosis Research Studies
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PubMed DOI PMC OpenAlex 마지막 보강 2026-04-30
OpenAlex 토픽 · Multiple Sclerosis Research Studies Neuroinflammation and Neurodegeneration Mechanisms Single-cell and spatial transcriptomics

Budina E, Reda JW, Refvik KC, Luehr J, Berg BT, Chun HR, Beckman TN, Solanki A, Nguyen M, Reda SN, Foley CR, Vuong I, Lauterbach AL, Hultgren K, Gomes S, Ishihara J, Volpatti LR, Hubbell JA

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[UNLABELLED] Interleukin-10 (IL-10) is a potent immunoregulatory cytokine that suppresses pro-inflammatory cytokine production, reduces antigen presentation by myeloid cells, promotes M2 macrophage po

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APA Erica Budina, Joseph W. Reda, et al. (2026). Serum albumin-fused interleukin-10 prevents neuroinflammation by promoting immunoregulation in the secondary lymphoid organs and limiting immune cell infiltration in the spinal cord.. bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology. https://doi.org/10.64898/2026.04.10.717764
MLA Erica Budina, et al.. "Serum albumin-fused interleukin-10 prevents neuroinflammation by promoting immunoregulation in the secondary lymphoid organs and limiting immune cell infiltration in the spinal cord.." bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology, 2026.
PMID 42039602

Abstract

[UNLABELLED] Interleukin-10 (IL-10) is a potent immunoregulatory cytokine that suppresses pro-inflammatory cytokine production, reduces antigen presentation by myeloid cells, promotes M2 macrophage polarization, and inhibits T cell activation. Despite these well-established immunoregulatory functions, efforts to harness recombinant IL-10 therapeutically have been limited by its short plasma half-life and poor retention in the secondary lymphoid organs (SLOs), key sites of autoreactive T cell priming in autoimmune disease. Previously, we engineered a fusion of serum albumin and IL-10 (SA-IL-10) with extended half-life and enhanced exposure in the SLOs following intravenous administration. Here, we integrate human transcriptomic analyses and a murine model of neuroinflammation, experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE), to investigate how sustained IL-10 exposure in the SLOs modulates immune responses under inflammatory conditions. Human single-cell RNA sequencing analyses revealed reduced IL-10 expression alongside increased IL-10 receptor expression across multiple immune cell populations in treatment-naïve patients with multiple sclerosis (MS), motivating the investigation of IL-10-based immunomodulatory strategies. Prophylactic SA-IL-10 administration prevented the development and progression of EAE with superior efficacy to wild type IL-10 and comparable protection to fingolimod, an FDA-approved MS therapy. Immunophenotyping of the SLOs revealed that SA-IL-10 suppressed pathogenic, antigen-specific RORγt Foxp3 T 17 T cells, CD86 M1-like macrophages, CD86 dendritic cells, and pro-inflammatory cytokine production, while expanding immunoregulatory CD206 M2-like macrophages and increasing the frequency of multiple checkpoint markers (CTLA-4, PD-1, TIGIT, ICOS) on GATA3 Foxp3 T 2 cells. Despite the absence of direct central nervous system targeting, SA-IL-10 treatment also reduced the infiltration of macrophages, dendritic cells, and CD4 T cells into the spinal cord. Repeated SA-IL-10 administration was well tolerated, as treated EAE mice gained significantly more body weight over the course of treatment compared to PBS- and WT IL-10-treated controls, and exhibited plasma biochemistry parameters comparable to control animals at study endpoint. Together, these findings demonstrate that increasing IL-10 exposure in the SLOs suppresses neuroinflammation by promoting immunoregulation.

[ONE SENTENCE SUMMARY] Subcutaneously administered serum albumin-fused interleukin-10 prevents experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis by suppressing pathogenic T 17 cells and pro-inflammatory myeloid cells in the secondary lymphoid organs and spinal cord, while expanding immunoregulatory cells in the secondary lymphoid organs.