Cook Andrew D, Turner Amanda L, Braine Emma L, Pobjoy Jarrad, Lenzo Jason C, Hamilton John A
Department of Medicine, University of Melbourne, Parkville, Victoria, Australia.
Arthritis Rheum. 2011 Aug;63(8):2340-51. doi: 10.1002/art.30354.
Even though there are clinical trials assessing granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) blockade in rheumatoid arthritis (RA), questions remain as to how GM-CSF acts as a proinflammatory cytokine. The aims of this study on the regulation of arthritis progression by GM-CSF were to determine the source of the GM-CSF, whether there are systemic effects, the changes in synovial tissue leukocyte populations, and the arthritis model dependence on GM-CSF.
Bone marrow chimeras were used to determine the source of GM-CSF required for the development of collagen-induced arthritis (CIA). The K/BxN serum-transfer model of arthritis was tested in GM-CSF(-/-) mice and using anti-GM-CSF monoclonal antibodies. Cell populations from arthritic mice were assessed by differential staining and flow cytometry.
In the CIA model, GM-CSF produced by bone marrow-derived cells was required for arthritis development. GM-CSF blockade, while ameliorating the development of CIA, was found to have systemic effects, limiting the increase in circulating Ly-6C(high) monocytes and neutrophils. GM-CSF blockade led to fewer synovial macrophages (both Ly-6C(high) and Ly-6C(low)), neutrophils, and lymphocytes. In the absence of GM-CSF, K/BxN serum-transfer arthritis initially developed normally; however, the numbers of Ly-6C(high) monocytes and synovial macrophages (both Ly-6C(high) and Ly-6C(low)) were again reduced, along with the peak disease severity and maintenance.
GM-CSF is a key player in two arthritis models, participating in interactions between hemopoietic cells, both locally and systemically, to control myeloid cell numbers as well as presumably to "activate" them. These results could be useful for the analysis of current clinical trials targeting GM-CSF in patients with RA.
尽管有临床试验评估粒细胞巨噬细胞集落刺激因子(GM-CSF)阻断在类风湿关节炎(RA)中的作用,但GM-CSF作为促炎细胞因子的作用方式仍存在疑问。本研究旨在探讨GM-CSF对关节炎进展的调节作用,确定GM-CSF的来源、是否存在全身效应、滑膜组织白细胞群体的变化以及关节炎模型对GM-CSF的依赖性。
采用骨髓嵌合体来确定胶原诱导性关节炎(CIA)发展所需GM-CSF的来源。在GM-CSF基因敲除小鼠中以及使用抗GM-CSF单克隆抗体对K/BxN血清转移关节炎模型进行了测试。通过鉴别染色和流式细胞术评估关节炎小鼠的细胞群体。
在CIA模型中,骨髓来源细胞产生的GM-CSF是关节炎发展所必需的。GM-CSF阻断在改善CIA发展的同时,被发现具有全身效应,限制了循环中Ly-6C(高)单核细胞和中性粒细胞的增加。GM-CSF阻断导致滑膜巨噬细胞(Ly-6C(高)和Ly-6C(低))、中性粒细胞和淋巴细胞数量减少。在缺乏GM-CSF的情况下,K/BxN血清转移关节炎最初正常发展;然而,Ly-6C(高)单核细胞和滑膜巨噬细胞(Ly-6C(高)和Ly-6C(低))的数量再次减少,同时疾病严重程度峰值和维持期也降低。
GM-CSF在两种关节炎模型中起关键作用,在局部和全身参与造血细胞之间的相互作用,以控制髓样细胞数量,并可能“激活”它们。这些结果可能有助于分析目前针对RA患者GM-CSF的临床试验。