Treffer: Number of individual ACPA reactivities in synovial fluid immune complexes, but not serum anti-CCP2 levels, associate with inflammation and joint destruction in rheumatoid arthritis

Title:
Number of individual ACPA reactivities in synovial fluid immune complexes, but not serum anti-CCP2 levels, associate with inflammation and joint destruction in rheumatoid arthritis
Contributors:
Uppsala University, Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc., Karolinska Institutet Stockholm, Uppsala University Hospital, Falu Sjukhus = Falu Hospital, Unité différenciation épidermique et auto-immunité rhumatoïde (UDEAR), Université Toulouse III - Paul Sabatier (UT3), Université de Toulouse (UT)-Université de Toulouse (UT)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM), Charité - UniversitätsMedizin = Berlin University Medicine, The Swedish Research CouncilThe Swedish Rheumatism AssociationKing Gustav V 80-year foundationThe Uppsala County CouncilThe Rudberg Foundation The Brunnberg Foundation., Karin Fromell PhD for help with the QCM-D measurements
Source:
ISSN: 0003-4967.
Publisher Information:
CCSD
BMJ Publishing Group
Publication Year:
2018
Collection:
Université Toulouse III - Paul Sabatier: HAL-UPS
Document Type:
Fachzeitschrift article in journal/newspaper
Language:
English
Relation:
info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/pmid/29895567; PUBMED: 29895567; PUBMEDCENTRAL: PMC6104681
DOI:
10.1136/annrheumdis-2017-212627
Accession Number:
edsbas.6F0A13EE
Database:
BASE

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International audience ; Introduction : Individual patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) show divergent specific anti-citrullinated protein/peptide antibodies (ACPA) patterns, but hitherto no individual ACPA specificity has consistently been linked to RA pathogenesis. ACPA are also implicated in immune complexes (IC)-associated joint pathology, but until now, there has been no method to investigate the role of individual ACPA in RA IC formation and IC-associated pathogenesis.Methods : We have developed a new technique based on IC binding to C1q-coated magnetic beads to purify and solubilise circulating IC in sera and synovial fluids (SF) from 77 patients with RA. This was combined with measurement of 19 individual ACPA in serum, SF and in the IC fractions from serum and SF. We investigated whether occurrence of individual ACPA as well as number of ACPA in these compartments was related to clinical and laboratory measures of disease activity and inflammation.Results : The majority of individual ACPA reactivities were enriched in SF as compared with in serum, and levels of ACPA in IC were regulated independently of levels in serum and SF. No individual ACPA reactivity in any compartment showed a dominating association to clinical and laboratory measures of disease activity and severity. Instead, the number of individual ACPA reactivities in the IC fraction from SF associated with a number of markers of joint destruction and inflammation. Conclusions : Our data highlight the polyclonality of ACPA in joint IC and the possibility that a broad ACPA repertoire in synovial fluid IC might drive the local inflammatory and matrix-degrading processes in joints, in analogy with antibody-induced rodent arthritis models.