IL1R2 Protein
Overview
Interleukin-1 receptor type 2 (IL1R2, CD121b) is a high-affinity decoy receptor in the interleukin-1 axis. Unlike [IL1R1](/proteins/il1r1), IL1R2 binds IL-1 ligands but does not propagate canonical pro-inflammatory signaling, so it functions as an endogenous brake on excessive cytokine activity.
IL1R2 is relevant to neurodegeneration because [interleukin-1 beta (IL-1β)](/biomarkers/interleukin-1-beta-il1b) is consistently implicated in [Alzheimer's disease](/diseases/alzheimers-disease), [Parkinson's disease](/diseases/parkinsons-disease), and related neuroinflammatory states.[@garlanda2018][@shaftel2008] Current evidence supports IL1R2 primarily as a modulator of inflammatory tone rather than a standalone disease-causal protein in CNS degeneration.[@garlanda2018][@ji2024]
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IL1R2 Protein
Overview
Interleukin-1 receptor type 2 (IL1R2, CD121b) is a high-affinity decoy receptor in the interleukin-1 axis. Unlike [IL1R1](/proteins/il1r1), IL1R2 binds IL-1 ligands but does not propagate canonical pro-inflammatory signaling, so it functions as an endogenous brake on excessive cytokine activity.
IL1R2 is relevant to neurodegeneration because [interleukin-1 beta (IL-1β)](/biomarkers/interleukin-1-beta-il1b) is consistently implicated in [Alzheimer's disease](/diseases/alzheimers-disease), [Parkinson's disease](/diseases/parkinsons-disease), and related neuroinflammatory states.[@garlanda2018][@shaftel2008] Current evidence supports IL1R2 primarily as a modulator of inflammatory tone rather than a standalone disease-causal protein in CNS degeneration.[@garlanda2018][@ji2024]
<div class="infobox infobox-protein">
<div class="infobox-header">IL1R2 Protein</div>
<table>
<tr><td class="infobox-label">Protein Name</td><td>Interleukin-1 Receptor Type 2</td></tr>
<tr><td class="infobox-label">Aliases</td><td>IL-1R2, IL-1RT2, CD121b</td></tr>
<tr><td class="infobox-label">Gene</td><td><a href="/genes/il1r2">IL1R2</a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="infobox-label">UniProt ID</td><td><a href="https://www.uniprot.org/uniprotkb/P27930">P27930</a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="infobox-label">Protein Class</td><td>Type I cytokine receptor, decoy receptor</td></tr>
<tr><td class="infobox-label">Localization</td><td>Cell membrane and soluble extracellular form</td></tr>
<tr><td class="infobox-label">Primary Function</td><td>Negative regulation of IL-1 signaling</td></tr>
<tr><td class="infobox-label">Major Context</td><td>Innate immunity, neuroinflammation buffering</td></tr>
<tr>
<td class="label">KG Connections</td>
<td><a href="/atlas" style="color:#4fc3f7">1 edges</a></td>
</tr>
</table>
</div>
Molecular Architecture
IL1R2 is structurally related to signaling IL-1 receptors but differs in its intracellular region:
- The extracellular immunoglobulin-like domains retain strong IL-1 ligand-binding capacity.[@colotta1993]
- The intracellular tail is truncated and lacks the signaling-competent architecture needed for downstream [NF-κB](/entities/nf-kb)/MAPK activation seen with IL1R1.[@colotta1993][@mantovani1995]
- IL1R2 therefore captures ligand without initiating a full inflammatory program, creating a receptor-level sink for IL-1 family cytokines.[@mantovani1995][@garlanda2018]
This architecture is the mechanistic basis for the classic “decoy receptor” model first established in foundational IL1R2 work.[@colotta1993][@mantovani1995]
IL1R2 biology operates through two complementary forms:
Membrane IL1R2
- Expressed on myeloid-lineage immune cells, including monocytes and neutrophils, and inducible in inflammatory states.[@mantovani1995][@garlanda2018]
- Competes with IL1R1 for IL-1α and IL-1β binding, reducing signaling receptor occupancy.[@mantovani1995]
Soluble IL1R2 (sIL1R2)
- Generated by proteolytic shedding and/or alternative transcript processing.[@garlanda2018][@cui2003]
- Acts in extracellular space (including blood and tissue compartments) as a cytokine trap that limits IL-1 bioavailability.[@garlanda2018][@cui2003]
Because both forms reduce effective IL-1 signaling, IL1R2 is often interpreted as part of the endogenous anti-inflammatory counter-regulatory network.
Signaling Logic in the IL-1 Axis
In simplified mechanistic terms:
IL-1 ligands are produced during tissue stress, infection, proteinopathy, or cell injury.[@shaftel2008][@griffin1989]
Signaling via IL1R1 promotes transcriptional inflammatory cascades (cytokines, adhesion molecules, innate effector programs).[@shaftel2008][@griffin1989]
IL1R2 captures ligand and lowers signaling flux through IL1R1.[@colotta1993][@mantovani1995]
The IL1R1:IL1R2 balance influences whether inflammation is adaptive/contained versus persistent and tissue-injurious.[@garlanda2018][@shaftel2008]This balance model is directly relevant to chronic neurodegenerative settings where low-grade inflammation persists for years.[@shaftel2008][@griffin1989]
Relevance to Neurodegeneration
Alzheimer's Disease Context
The IL-1 pathway is repeatedly linked to amyloid-associated neuroinflammation, glial activation, and synaptic dysfunction in AD literature.[@shaftel2008][@griffin1989] IL1R2 is not a dominant AD causal gene, but it is biologically plausible as a buffering node that can dampen IL-1 burden when induced.[@garlanda2018][@ji2024]
Clinical and translational studies of circulating IL-1 family proteins in AD support altered cytokine-receptor homeostasis, including decoy receptor behavior, although effect sizes and cohort reproducibility vary.[@licastro2000]
Parkinson's Disease Context
In PD, inflammatory activation of [microglia](/cell-types/microglia-neuroinflammation) and cytokine-network dysregulation are established contributors to neuronal stress.[@shaftel2008][@hirsch2012] IL1R2 is best interpreted as a candidate modulator in this environment rather than a validated monogenic PD driver. Mechanistically, higher effective IL1R2 activity could reduce IL-1-mediated amplification loops in vulnerable circuits (for example, nigrostriatal systems), but direct interventional proof remains limited.[@garlanda2018][@hirsch2012]
Broader Tauopathy/Proteinopathy Interpretation
Across tauopathies and synucleinopathies, the translational value of IL1R2 lies in pathway control:
- Reducing excessive IL-1 signal tone
- Potentially lowering secondary glial toxicity
- Improving immune-homeostasis set points
Evidence is strongest at pathway level and weaker for IL1R2-specific disease attribution.[@garlanda2018][@shaftel2008][@ji2024]
Biomarker and Therapeutic Considerations
Biomarker Role
sIL1R2 is measurable in plasma/serum and may reflect anti-inflammatory counter-regulation.[@cui2003][@licastro2000] In neurodegenerative cohorts, sIL1R2 should generally be interpreted alongside other inflammatory markers (for example IL-1β, IL-6, TNF family markers) rather than in isolation.[@shaftel2008][@licastro2000]
Therapeutic Strategy Space
Potential translational approaches include:
- Enhancing endogenous IL1R2-mediated buffering
- Delivering engineered decoy constructs (conceptually analogous to receptor-trap biologics)
- Combining IL-1 axis modulation with disease-specific therapies and glial-state interventions
Recent reviews describe IL1R2 as an attractive anti-inflammatory target class, but clinical-neurology evidence remains early and non-definitive.[@ji2024]
Evidence Quality and Open Questions
Strengths
- Strong biochemical and immunology evidence for decoy receptor function.[@colotta1993][@mantovani1995][@garlanda2018]
- Robust pathway rationale linking IL-1 excess to neurodegenerative progression.[@shaftel2008][@griffin1989][@hirsch2012]
Limitations
- Limited IL1R2-specific causal evidence in human neurodegenerative disease cohorts.
- Heterogeneous study design and biomarker assays across clinical datasets.[@licastro2000]
- Unclear target-engagement thresholds for CNS-relevant IL1R2 modulation.
Priority Questions
- Which CNS and peripheral cell states most strongly regulate IL1R2 in AD/PD progression?
- Can IL1R2-guided biomarker panels stratify inflammatory endophenotypes for trials?
- What degree of IL-1 dampening preserves host defense while reducing chronic neurotoxicity?
See Also
- [IL1R2 Gene](/genes/il1r2)
- [Interleukin-1 Beta (IL-1β) - Biomarker](/biomarkers/interleukin-1-beta-il1b)
- [IL1R1 Gene](/genes/il1r1)
- [Interleukin-1 Receptor Type 1 Protein](/proteins/il1r1)
- [Neuroinflammation Pathway](/mechanisms/neuroinflammation-pathway)
- [Parkinson's Disease](/diseases/parkinsons-disease)
- [Alzheimer's Disease](/diseases/alzheimers-disease)
External Links
- [UniProt: IL1R2 (P27930)](https://www.uniprot.org/uniprotkb/P27930)
- [NCBI Gene: IL1R2](https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/gene/7850)
- [GeneCards: IL1R2](https://www.genecards.org/cgi-bin/carddisp.pl?gene=IL1R2)
References
[Colotta F, Re F, Muzio M, et al, Interleukin-1 type II receptor: a decoy target for IL-1 that is regulated by IL-4 (1993)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/8332913/)
[Mantovani A, Locati M, Vecchi A, et al, Decoy receptors: a strategy to regulate inflammatory cytokines and chemokines (1995)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/7848516/)
[Garlanda C, Dinarello CA, Mantovani A, The interleukin-1 family: back to the future (2018)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30109367/)
[Shaftel SS, Griffin WST, O'Banion MK, The role of interleukin-1 in neuroinflammation and Alzheimer disease (2008)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/18403069/)
[Ji Y, Wei J, Wang Y, et al, Interleukin-1 receptor type 2 as potential therapeutic target in inflammatory diseases (2024)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38850793/)
[Cui X, Rouhani FN, Hawari F, Levine SJ, An interleukin-1 receptor type II exon 9 deletion mutant is a dominant negative receptor (2003)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/14662887/)
[Griffin WST, Stanley LC, Ling C, et al, Brain interleukin 1 and S-100 immunoreactivity are elevated in Down syndrome and Alzheimer disease (1989)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/2529544/)
[Licastro F, Pedrini S, Caputo L, et al, Increased plasma levels of interleukin-1, interleukin-6 and alpha-1-antichymotrypsin in patients with Alzheimer's disease: peripheral inflammation or signals from the brain? (2000)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/10814576/)
[Hirsch EC, Vyas S, Hunot S, Neuroinflammation in Parkinson's disease (2012)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/17956293/)