Selective neutralization of prostaglandin E2 blocks inflammation, hyperalgesia, and interleukin 6 production in vivo.

JP Portanova, Y Zhang, GD Anderson… - The Journal of …, 1996 - rupress.org
JP Portanova, Y Zhang, GD Anderson, SD Hauser, JL Masferrer, K Seibert, SA Gregory…
The Journal of experimental medicine, 1996rupress.org
The role of prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) in the development of inflammatory symptoms and
cytokine production was evaluated in vivo using a neutralizing anti-PGE2 monoclonal
antibody 2B5. In carrageenan-induced paw inflammation, pretreatment of rats with 2B5
substantially prevented the development of tissue edema and hyperalgesia in affected
paws. The antibody was shown to bind the majority of PGE2 produced at the inflammatory
site. In adjuvant-induced arthritis, the therapeutic administration of 2B5 to arthritic rats …
The role of prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) in the development of inflammatory symptoms and cytokine production was evaluated in vivo using a neutralizing anti-PGE2 monoclonal antibody 2B5. In carrageenan-induced paw inflammation, pretreatment of rats with 2B5 substantially prevented the development of tissue edema and hyperalgesia in affected paws. The antibody was shown to bind the majority of PGE2 produced at the inflammatory site. In adjuvant-induced arthritis, the therapeutic administration of 2B5 to arthritic rats substantially reversed edema in affected paws. Anti-PGE2 treatment also reduced paw levels of IL-6 RNA and serum IL-6 protein without modifying tumor necrosis factor RNA levels in the same tissue. In each model, the antiinflammatory efficacy of 2B5 was indistinguishable from that of the nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drug indomethacin, which blocked the production of all PGs. These results indicate that PGE2 plays a major role in tissue edema, hyperalgesia, and IL-6 production at sites of inflammation, and they suggest that selective pharmacologic modulation of PGE2 synthesis or activity may provide a useful means of mitigating the symptoms of inflammatory disease.
rupress.org