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Immune system

IL-1β (Interleukin-1 beta)

IL-1β (Interleukin-1 beta) is a pro-inflammatory cytokine produced by monocytes and macrophages, mediating both acute inflammation and inflammaging — the sterile, low-grade systemic inflammation that accumulates with age. Activation requires two signals: a priming signal (e.g., toll-like receptor engagement) drives transcription of inactive pro-IL-1β; a second signal triggers NLRP3 inflammasome assembly, activating caspase-1, which cleaves pro-IL-1β into its secreted form. In aging tissue, senescent cells release IL-1β as part of the SASP, and declining SIRT2-mediated deacetylation of NLRP3 lowers the assembly threshold, sustaining inflammation. Causal involvement in atherosclerosis was shown in CANTOS (Ridker et al., 2017; n = 10,061): canakinumab, a monoclonal antibody neutralising IL-1β, cut major adverse cardiovascular events by 15% (relative) at 150 mg versus placebo, independent of LDL changes. A pre-specified exploratory safety analysis found dose-dependent reductions in lung cancer incidence. Canakinumab is approved for autoinflammatory syndromes but investigational for cardiovascular indications; colchicine, which inhibits NLRP3 assembly via microtubule disruption, received regulatory approval for cardiovascular secondary prevention in several jurisdictions by 2024.

Sources

  1. Ridker PM, Everett BM, Thuren T, et al.. (2017). Antiinflammatory Therapy with Canakinumab for Atherosclerotic Disease. *New England Journal of Medicine*doi:10.1056/NEJMoa1707914
  2. Libby P. (2017). Interleukin-1 Beta as a Target for Atherosclerosis Therapy: Biological Basis of CANTOS and Beyond. *Journal of the American College of Cardiology*doi:10.1016/j.jacc.2017.09.028