Abstract
The essential biological role of erythropoietin (EPO) in maintaining erythrocyte mass has been well understood for many years. Although EPO is required for the maturation of red cells, it also has strong procoagulant effects on the vascular endothelium and platelets, which limit erythrocyte losses after hemorrhage. Like other members of the type 1 cytokine superfamily, EPO has multiple biological activities. For the past 10 years, multiple investigators have shown that EPO acts as a locally produced antagonist of proinflammatory cytokines that are generated by the innate immune response in response to infection, trauma, or metabolic stress. Specifically, EPO inhibits apoptosis of cells surrounding a locus of injury, reduces the influx of inflammatory cells, and recruits tissue-specific stem cells and endothelial progenitor cells. Available evidence suggests that these multiple, nonerythropoietic effects of EPO are mediated by a tissue protective receptor (TPR) that is distinct from the homodimeric receptor responsible for erythropoiesis. Notably, activation of the TPR requires a higher concentration of EPO than is needed for maximal erythropoiesis. Unfortunately, these higher concentrations of EPO also stimulate hematopoietic and procoagulant pathways, which can cause adverse effects and, therefore, potentially limit the clinical use of EPO for tissue protection. To circumvent these problems, the EPO molecule has been successfully modified in a variety of ways to interact only with the TPR. Early clinical experience has shown that these compounds appear to be safe, and proof of concept trials are ready to begin.
OVERVIEW: TISSUE PROTECTIVE EFFECTS OF ERYTHROPOIETIN
Erythropoietin (EPO) was first identified as a hormone that stimulates erythropoiesis by blocking the programmed cell death of red cell precursors (reviewed by Fisher1). In its endocrine role, EPO is produced in the adult kidney in response to hypoxia and released into the circulation. After binding to the homodimeric EPO receptor (EPOR)2 at picomolar concentrations, it facilitates the survival of proerythroblasts within the bone marrow (Fig. 1). Because erythrocyte precursors are continuously produced, a sustained, low concentration of EPO within the circulation is required to replace senescent red cells.
Unexpectedly, in 1990, investigators observed that EPO also stimulated growth and migration of endothelial cells in culture.2Notably, the concentrations of EPO required for these effects were substantially higher (nanomolar) than that required for erythropoiesis. Follow-on studies showed neuronal-like PC12 cells also expressed a receptor for EPO with a lower affinity for EPO3that was biochemically distinct from the (EPOR)2. A variety of recent evidence has shown that this alternative receptor for EPO is a heteromer, composed of EPOR monomer subunits and the beta common receptor (CD131) that is also used for signaling by the type I cytokines granulocyte macrophage colony-stimulating factor, interleukin 3 (IL-3), and IL-5.4Recently, Sautina et al.5have proposed that the VEGF receptor also associates with CD131 in vascular endothelial cells.
The existence of receptor isoforms suggested that the EPO has other biological functions in addition to erythropoiesis. Indeed, for the past decade, additional work has shown that EPO is a principal component of a paracrine-autocrine system that mediates tissue protection. In this mode, EPO is locally produced in response to tissue injury but with a significant time delay. This pool of EPO subsequently signals through the heteromeric receptor (tissue protective receptor; TPR) to prevent secondary injury by suppressing proinflammatory cytokines activated by the innate immune response and blocks cellular apoptosis. In a variety of tissues,6,7EPO antagonizes both the production and the effects of proinflammatory cytokines and limits ischemia-reperfusion injury. Expression of the TPR peaks several hours after infection or injury but before EPO production. In addition, proinflammatory cytokines suppress endogenous EPO but stimulate TPR expression. It is the relative excess of the TPR with respect to EPO that provides the rationale for administration of exogenous EPO for tissue protection.
Historically, the cytoprotective effects of EPO were first demonstrated in the nervous system, which remains the most extensively studied tissue to date. Our group expanded relevance of the newly discovered neuroprotective effects of EPO into ischemic, traumatic, and inflammatory lesions in a series of publications8beginning in 2000 and as reviewed by Brines and Cerami.6Furthermore, we showed that systemically administered EPO could cross the blood-brain barrier (BBB) in therapeutically relevant concentrations and significantly reduce the volume of injury in animal models of stroke or traumatic brain injury (TBI). The discovery that EPO passes through the intact BBB and is active not only in ischemia but in a variety of injury models greatly accelerated interest in using recombinant human EPO (rhEPO) to prevent brain injury. Since then, we and many other investigators have shown that EPO possesses tissue protective effects in diverse tissues and organs, including the heart, kidney, gut, lung, and skin (reviewed by Arcasoy9). Here, we will highlight in moderate detail some of the significant findings in the nervous system as examples of EPO-mediated tissue protection.
ERYTHROPOIETIN IN CENTRAL AND PERIPHERAL NERVOUS SYSTEM INJURIES
Stroke
Many laboratories have assessed the effects of systemically administered rhEPO in animal models of nonhemorrhagic ischemic stroke. Recently, 2 meta-analyses of these animal studies were published. Minnerup et al.10analyzed 16 preclinical studies and concluded that when rhEPOs (or its analogues, as discussed later) were administered after the onset of ischemia, infarct size was reduced by about one-third and was associated with improved neurobehavioral outcomes. A second meta-analysis11examined 19 studies involving 346 animals for infarct size and 425 animals for neurobehavioral outcome and found that rhEPO improved infarct size by 30.0% (95% confidence interval [CI], 21.3-38.8) and neurobehavioral outcome by 39.8% (33.7-45.9). These authors also note that studies that randomized the animals to treatment group or that blinded assessment of outcome showed lower efficacy.11
Results of the first attempt to translate these preclinical findings into a patient population suffering from nonhemorrhagic stroke in the territory of the middle cerebral artery suggested that rhEPO might be beneficial for the treatment of patients.12However, a larger double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized multicenter EPO Stroke Trial (NCT00604630), designed to evaluate efficacy and safety of rhEPO in stroke, did not demonstrate a therapeutic effect. In fact, the overall death rate was increased in the rhEPO-treated group: 16.4% (n = 42 of 256) versus 9.0% (n = 24 of 266) in the placebo group (odds ratio, 1.98; 95% CI, 1.16-3.38; P = 0.01).13The major difference between these 2 studies was that the later one included a significant number of patients that also received thrombolytic treatment. Results of a recent preclinical rodent stroke model provide a plausible explanation for the different outcome of these trials: Zechariah et al.14have shown that tissue plasminogen activator amplifies EPO-mediated metalloproteinase production, leading to a breakdown of the BBB and increased tissue damage.
Traumatic Brain and Spinal Cord Injury
In experimental models, rhEPO improves outcome after a TBI.8,15,16At high doses, rhEPO has been shown to have neuroprotective effects when given early after injury and to have effects that enhance neurological recovery even when given with a significant temporal delay.17-23The time window for EPO-induced neuroprotection has not been well defined, but EPO given as long as 24 hours post-injury has been reported to have significantly enhanced neurological recovery in TBI models. A clinical trial evaluating the effects of rhEPO in patients with TBI (NCT00313716) is ongoing at the Baylor College of Medicine and the University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston/Memorial Hermann Hospital. An additional multicenter trial is planned, but not yet initiated, by the Australian and New Zealand Intensive Care Research Centre (NCT00987454). Multiple laboratories have also demonstrated that rhEPO is neuroprotective after spinal cord injury in animal models.18-23There is one active trial (NCT00561067) evaluating the efficacy of rhEPO in patients with traumatic spinal cord injury.
Cerebral Malaria
Cerebral malaria (CM) is a devastating neurological syndrome arising from an extreme production of proinflammatory cytokines in response to parasite-infected erythrocytes within the brain vasculature. Two laboratories have demonstrated the protective effect of rhEPO in murine models of CM.24,25The importance of endogenous EPO in human CM is underscored by a recent clinical study of 124 Kenyan children with CM, in which high endogenous plasma levels of EPO correlated with an 80% reduction in risk of developing neurological sequelae.26A clinical trial evaluating the use of rhEPO as an adjunct treatment for children with CM is currently active. This study (NCT00697164) aims to enroll 200 children of 6 months to 14 years of age admitted to the hospital with CM but without severe anemia or pulmonary involvement. The children will be treated with standard antimalarial treatment (quinine) and a 3-day course of high-dose rhEPO. The main endpoint of this trial is survival at 5 days after admission, and the study is powered to detect a 25% reduction of mortality.
Hypoxic-Ischemic Encephalopathy
Recombinant human EPO confers neuronal protection when administered systemically to animals subjected to global brain ischemia. A trial of rhEPO treatment for 153 term infants with moderate hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy observed a reduced disability.27Death or moderate/severe disability occurred in 35 (43.8%) of 80 infants in the control group and 18 (24.6%) of 73 infants in the EPO group (P = 0.017) at 18 months. In addition, a retrospective study of 82 preterm infants given 6 weeks of rhEPO therapy to prevent anemia identified an association between rhEPO doses and higher scores on the Bayley Scale of Infant Development, Psychomotor Developmental, and Mental Developmental Index at 12 months of age.28
Many additional in vivo and in vitro models of nervous system injury have been evaluated including diabetic or toxic neuropathies, experimental autoimmune encephalitis,29-31and subarachnoid hemorrhage32,33as recently reviewed by Brines and Cerami.6A small number of pilot clinical studies have also been performed in normal volunteers and in patients with depression that show effects of EPO on cognition and mood34,35or in patients with schizophrenia,36amyotrophic lateral sclerosis,37or multiple sclerosis.38
MANY TISSUES EXPRESS EPO IN RESPONSE TO INJURY
The role of EPO as a modulator of the innate immune response is not limited to the nervous system. Virtually, all tissues examined to date respond to metabolic stress or injury by activating a local EPO response.
Myocardial Injury
The heart was the first tissue outside of the brain for which cytoprotective effects of EPO were confirmed.39Subsequent work performed by numerous investigators showed that similar to the effects within the nervous system, rhEPO protects the myocardium from ischemic, infectious, traumatic, or toxic injuries.40-45Endogenous EPO is produced locally by myocardial tissue, and as expected of a paracrine/autocrine system, a receptor for EPO is expressed by neonatal and adult rat cardiomyocytes,46,47ventricular myocytes, and endothelial cells.48Preclinical studies have shown that administration of rhEPO after ischemia/reperfusion decreases infarct size in part by inhibiting cardiomyocyte apotosis. Recombinant human EPO and endogenous EPO may also reduce subacute ischemia by inducing neovascularization, either by stimulating endothelial cells in situ or by mobilizing endothelial progenitor cells from the bone marrow.
Clinical studies have demonstrated a beneficial effect of rhEPO administration in patients with chronic heart failure. Unlike patient populations with chronic kidney disease and cancer-related anemia (discussed later), treatment with erythropoiesis-stimulating agents (ESAs) has not been associated with higher mortality rates in patients with chronic heart failure. In fact, a recent meta-analysis of 7 randomized controlled clinical trials with 650 patients (363 and 287 patients treated with ESAs and placebo, respectively) showed a decreased risk of hospitalization for heart failure in the ESA-treated group and no difference in mortality between the 2 groups.49Although one clinical study has demonstrated that rhEPO improved cardiac function without increasing hematocrit,50in most, it has been impossible to determine if these beneficial effects on the human cardiovascular system occur independently of increases in hemoglobin levels.
In addition, in contrast to trials in which ESAs were administered chronically, acute dosing has been evaluated in the setting of revascularization procedures after myocardial infarction. Several small studies have been published that present opposite results. Binbrek et al.51observed no protective effect of EPO when used in the setting of thrombolysis. In contrast, when administered after stent placement, EPO was observed to confer benefit by reducing infarct size.52
It is important to appreciate that a number of observations derived from animal studies suggest that EPO's cardioprotective properties are independent of its erythropoietic activities. First, a single dose of rhEPO that does not increase the hematocrit is protective in rodent39and rabbit53models of cardiac infarction. Second, isolated cardiomyocytes and isolated perfused hearts are more tolerant to hypoxia when treated with rhEPO.39Third, EPO modified to possess no erythropoietic activity (discussed later) retains its cardioprotective properties in permanent ischemia and ischemia/reperfusion.54Fourth, EPO is not protective for cardiomyocytes subjected to metabolic stress that have been obtained from βCR (CD131) knockout mice that possess a fully intact (EPOR)2.4
HOW DOES EPO PROTECT TISSUES?
Erythropoietin's mechanisms of protective action have been most extensively evaluated in nervous tissue for which rhEPO has been shown to possess neurotrophic,55antiapoptotic, and angiogenic properties56and to promote neural regeneration.57These effects are dose dependent58and, in some cases, depend in part on other known molecules, for example, brain-derived nerve growth factor.59In animal models, the expression of EPO and EPOR in the brain after cerebral ischemia/infarction occurs with a strict temporal sequence. Histopathological changes identify a pneumbra around the lesion, that is, tissue at risk for further injury. Within the penumbra, endothelial cells, intravascular inflammatory cells, and neurons all express EPO, whereas EPOR is expressed by neurons, astrocytes, and endothelial cells.57,60,61Because the expression of EPOR precedes the up-regulation of EPO synthesis,60tissue sensitivity to EPO increases as a function of time.62Also, EPO can increase cerebral blood flow by its effect on endothelial nitric oxide production63and by preventing endothelial cell apoptosis and, in these ways, maintain the microcirculation within the penumbra. In the subacute phase, EPO can also improve tissue oxygenation by driving neoangiogenesis. These all tend to reduce infarct volume significantly.57,60,61The persistent up-regulation of EPO production by astrocytes after hypoxia also provides rapidly available sources of EPO to enable neurons to tolerate otherwise damaging ischemia.61Erythropoietin also strongly prevents the development of tissue edema by modulating the water transporter aquaporin in astrocytes.64
Receptor Signaling Cascade
Erythropoiesis occurs when EPO binds to the preformed (EPOR)2 and causes a conformational change that subsequently triggers Janus kinase/signal transducers and activators of transcription (STAT) activation. The resulting molecular cascade results in the up-regulation of antiapoptotic proteins (eg, Bcl-2) that inhibit apoptosis of erythrocyte precursors.65In contrast, EPO-mediated tissue protection uses multiple signaling pathways activated in parallel and that vary by cell and tissue type. Cell signaling pathways that are known to be used by EPO and mediate tissue protection include (1) phosphorylation and activation of Janus kinase1/2, STAT3, or STAT5A (but not of STAT1alpha and STAT5B); (2) phosphorylation and activation of phosphoinositol 3-kinase and its downstream kinase Akt; (3) activation of protein kinase C, which results in a rise in free intracellular calcium; (4) RAS/mitogen-activated protein kinase (Raf, MEK1/2, p42/44 MAPK, and p38 MAPK); and (5) up-regulation of Sonic hedgehog and its downstream target mammalian achaete-scute homolog 1 (Mash1).66
Individual specific tissue protective effects that are activated by EPO in particular cell types can depend upon different pathways. For example, EPO has both neurotrophic and antiapoptotic effects in neurons. For hippocampal neurons, EPO signals via both the PI3K/Akt and the STAT pathways to support neurite outgrowth, whereas the STAT pathway is not required for inhibition of apoptosis.67In contrast, in the SH-SY5Y differentiated neuroblastoma cell line, both the Akt and STAT pathway activation is required to prevent apoptosis.68
A CONUNDRUM: THE HIGH DOSES OF RHEPO REQUIRED FOR TISSUE PROTECTION CAN CAUSE SERIOUS ADVERSE EFFECTS
Despite the many attractive features of rhEPO-mediated tissue protection observed in preclinical models, translation of rhEPO-dependent protection into the clinical setting for use in neurological, renal, or cardiac disorders has posed a dilemma. The high doses of rhEPO required for tissue protection and enhancement of recovery are associated with very real risks of significant clinical complications. In fact, even moderate doses of rhEPO administered chronically have been associated with adverse consequences in patients. For example, the very large Trial to Reduce Cardiovascular Events with Aranesp Therapy trial69evaluated whether the use of an ESA to treat anemia in diabetic patients with renal insufficiency could reduce mortality and slow disease progression. In fact, the results showed an increased incidence of stroke within the ESA arm and no beneficial effects of rhEPO on disease progression.
Survival
Large-scale clinical studies involving higher doses of ESAs administered as treatment of anemia or to improve quality of life have shown that as a class ESAs reduce overall survival and/or increase the risk of tumor progression or recurrence in patients with breast, non-small cell lung, head and neck, lymphoid, and cervical cancer (http://www.fda.gov/Drugs/DrugSafety/PostmarketDrugSafetyInformationforPatientsandProviders/ucm200297.htm). A recent meta-analysis of randomized trials evaluating the association of recombinant ESAs with mortality in patients with cancer analyzed data from a total of 13,933 patients with cancer in 53 trials.70Erythropoiesis-stimulating agents increased mortality during the active study period (combined hazard ratio [cHR], 1.17; 95% CI, 1.06-1.30) and reduced overall survival (cHR, 1.06; 95% CI, 1.00-1.12), with little heterogeneity between trials. The cHR for mortality during the active study period was 1.10 (range, 0.98-1.24), whereas it was 1.04 (range, 0.97-1.11) for overall survival. There was little evidence for a difference between trials of patients given different anticancer treatments (P value for interaction = 0.42). The mechanism by which ESAs affect these outcomes is not entirely clear but appears to arise from thrombosis and tumor growth.
Thrombosis
Multiple studies using both animal models and patients indicate that ESAs augment thrombopoeisis as well as platelet and endothelial cell activation.71-77The resulting thrombotic complications of EPO are dose related.78-80Almost all studies of ESAs administered to critically ill patients and in postoperative patients have shown an increased risk of thromboembolic events after ESA administration. For example, a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, multicenter trial (N = 1460) in anemic critically ill patients demonstrated a 29-day survival benefit in the trauma subgroup receiving rhEPO (mortality, 6.7% vs 3.5%), although it did not result in fewer blood transfusions. Despite the improvement in the outcome of the rhEPO-treated patients, there was a significant increase in the incidence of thrombophlebitis, from 5.7% to 8.7% (P = 0.04).81The most serious complications associated with rhEPO occurred in a recent trial of rhEPO, given at 40,000 IU/d for 3 days after stroke, in which rhEPO-treated patients had a higher rate of intracranial hemorrhage and a higher mortality rate.13These results triggered the US Food Drug Administration to place all rhEPO neuroprotection trials in the United States on hold.
Tumor Growth
A second possible mechanism by which exogenously administered rhEPO may worsen outcome in patients with cancer is by promoting vasculogenesis and tumor growth. Erythropoietin has been shown to promote physiological angiogenesis,82,83angiogenesis during wound healing,84and estrogen-dependant cyclical angiogenesis in the uterus.85,86However, it appears that EPO can also drive pathological neoangiogenesis. For example, 3 important studies in different mouse models of cancer have shown that EPO is an important angiogenic factor that regulates neovascularization of tumors.86-88An additional concern is that EPO may act as a growth factor for certain types of cancer cells, although it must be noted that there is a great deal of controversy concerning this possibility. On the one hand, results of a number of in vitro studies show that rhEPO can induce proliferation, increase cellular migration and invasion, as well as confer resistance to chemoradiation in some tumor cells.89-95On the other hand, studies using different tumor types have also concluded that rhEPO does not affect cellular proliferation or in vitro sensitivity to chemotherapeutic agents.95-97It is notable that many workers in the field have demonstrated the expression of EPOR on tumor cells and responses to EPO (reviewed by Arcasoy9). In rebuttal, several papers recently published by scientists employed by Amgen (the largest manufacturer of ESAs) have concluded that the reagents used by other scientists are faulty98and that tumor cells do not express a functional EPOR or respond biologically to rhEPO.99,100Further work will obviously be required to clarify this controversial area.
A SOLUTION TO THESE PROBLEMS: DESIGNER EPOS THAT ARE ONLY TISSUE PROTECTIVE?
If the erythropoietic effects of EPO could be functionally separated from its tissue protective effects, more specific ligands could potentially be developed that avoid adverse effects that depend upon the EPOR homodimer. In 2003-2004, our group demonstrated for the first time that the hematopoietic and tissue protective effects of EPO are, in fact, independent biological properties101,102(Table 1). This was accomplished using 2 approaches: (1) by capitalizing on the very different temporal characteristics of EPO signaling in erythropoiesis compared with tissue protection and (2) by preferentially interfering with the binding of EPO to the hematopoietic receptor.
As discussed earlier, effective erythropoiesis requires EPO to be constantly available. In contrast, tissue protection is characterized by the appearance of molecules that trigger long-lasting effects, acting in effect as molecular switches for long-lasting gene expression programs. Recombinant human EPO possesses a relatively long plasma half-life (∼5-8 hours) because of the presence of multiple oligosaccharides terminated by sialic acid. Removal of these sialic acid residues drastically increases plasma clearance, such that asialo-EPO has a reduced plasma half-life of only ∼2 minutes. Although a single injection of asialo-EPO has no effect on hematopoiesis, it is as potent as native EPO for tissue protection.101
Another approach to the development of specific tissue protective ligands involves considerations of EPO structure-activity relationships with respect to the hematopoietic receptor. The molecular interaction of EPO with the (EPOR)2 complex has been extensively studied, and critical regions within EPO that interact with (EPOR)2 have been identified103-106(Fig. 2). Erythropoietin binds to both subunits of the homodimer and, while in a bridging position, induces a conformational change that triggers receptor signaling. The specific regions of EPO involved are portions of helices A and C (site 2, Fig. 2) as well as helix D and the loop connecting helices A and B (site 1, Fig. 2).103-106Chemical or mutational modifications of amino acid residues within these 2 regions of the EPO molecule prevent its binding to (EPOR)2. Remarkably, however, a number of these modified EPO molecules retain potent tissue protective properties.102Using this approach, a number of EPO derivatives can be synthesized that are cytoprotective but are devoid of hematopoietic, procoagulant, and vasoconstrictive activities. Carbamoylated EPO (CEPO) is one extensively studied derivative that is produced by chemically converting the positively charged lysines within the molecule (EPO has 8) into the neutral amino acid homocitrulline. Erythropoietin and CEPO differ markedly in a number of biological properties. For example, although both recruit endothelial progenitor cells, only EPO stimulates the mitosis of more differentiated endothelial cells.107Carbamoylated EPO has been extensively evaluated in multiple preclinical models in our laboratory54,102,107-110as well as by others66,111-115and confirmed to possess fully preserved tissue protective properties. For example, rodent cardiomyocytes undergo apoptosis when exposed to the toxin staurosporine in vitro. Inclusion of either CEPO or EPO in the exposure medium significantly attenuates this apoptosis (Fig. 3). Carbamoylated EPO is currently in clinical development for ischemic stroke (NCT00870844) and Friedreich's ataxia (NCT01016366).
Clearly, the observation of different biological effects of EPO and CEPO support the concept of receptor isoforms. As previously noted, the TPR is pharmacologically distinct from (EPOR)2. Specifically, it exhibits a lower affinity for EPO, forms distinct molecular species in cross-linking experiments,3and when immunoprecipitated under nonreducing conditions, the EPOR monomer is covalently bound to the βCR (CD131). Previous work has shown that CD131 form complexes with EPOR116and with the alpha receptor subunits specific for granulocyte macrophage colony-stimulating factor, IL-3, and IL-5. However, because normal hematopoiesis occurs in CD131 knockout mice, it was concluded that this association was not biologically relevant. Thus, there are 2 different EPOR complexes, one accounting for its hematopoietic and the other for its tissue-protective activities. As expected, in CD131 knockout mice, neither EPO nor CEPO is tissue protective. For example, Figure 4 shows that while wild-type mice respond well to CEPO in the setting of spinal cord injury, neither EPO nor CEPO is protective in CD131 knockout mice.
In an effort to further characterize the structure-activity relationships of EPO, our team produced a series of peptides based on the primary sequence of EPO as well as peptides designed to mimic its 3-dimensional spatial structure. The most interesting peptides are derived from residues of EPO that are not involved in binding to the classical (EPOR)2 complex (ie, regions of EPO other than sites 1 and 2; Fig. 2). These peptides were then assayed for tissue/neuroprotective and hematopoeitic potency. As a result of these studies, helix B was identified as a tissue protective region of EPO. Of note, helix B does not contain lysine so it is not modified by carbamoylation. It is the only helix not involved with binding to the homodimeric receptor.
One of the peptides, ARA 290, is currently in clinical development by Araim Pharmaceuticals, a spin-off of Warren Pharmaceuticals. ARA 290 is a remarkable 11 amino acid peptide composed of the spatially adjacent amino acids on the portion of helix B that faces outward into the aqueous medium (Fig. 5). ARA 290 was designed to mimic the tertiary structure of helix B117and thus acts as a ligand for the TPR. Despite the fact that ARA 290 has a short half-life (∼2 minutes), it is at least equipotent on a molar basis to rhEPO, because like asialoEPO,101it has a rapid effect on gene expression and, in this way, triggers protection responses.118The tissue protective effects of ARA 290 have demonstrated using a large number of animal models, including models of sciatic nerve injury, middle cerebral artery ischemia, renal ischemia-reperfusion injury, and wound healing.117For example, in mice subjected to 30 minutes of ischemia followed by reperfusion, administration of ARA 290 after reperfusion is associated with preservation of function (Fig. 6) and a reduction of tissue injury.117In addition, like EPO, ARA 290 also has positive effects in some normal tissues, for example, effects on cognition.
SAFETY OF ARA 290
Extensive preclinical safety studies have been carried out by Araim Pharmaceuticals. The results of these studies show that ARA 290 even at very high dosages has no effect on hematopoiesis or any toxic activities in rabbits, rats, or mice. Safety trials have been carried successfully through phase 1a and 1b. ARA 290 is currently poised to enter proof-of-concept studies.
CONCLUSIONS
Erythropoietin locally produced in response to cellular stress plays many roles in the prevention, attenuation, and termination of injury. Erythropoietin also promotes healing and restoration of function in diverse tissues. However, the strong suppressive effects of proinflammatory cytokines produced by activation of the innate immune response tend to limit the beneficial effects of locally produced EPO. In contrast, the TPR is strongly up-regulated in the vicinity of injury, providing the rationale for systemic exogenous EPO administration. Tissue protection requires a high local concentration of EPO because of the relatively low affinity of the TPR. Engineered molecules that bind only to TPR avoid hematopoietic complications and appear well suited for translation of EPO-mediated tissue protection into the clinic.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The authors thank Anthony Cerami, Michael Yamin, Thomas Coleman, Qiao-wen Xie, and many other co-workers for their critical contributions to this work. They apologize in advance to their many colleagues whose work they have not been able to discuss because of the limited space in this brief review.