[HTML][HTML] Clinicopathological correlations of podoplanin (gp38) expression in rheumatoid synovium and its potential contribution to fibroblast platelet crosstalk

MJ Del Rey, R Fare, E Izquierdo, A Usategui… - PLoS …, 2014 - journals.plos.org
MJ Del Rey, R Fare, E Izquierdo, A Usategui, JL Rodriguez-Fernandez, A Suarez-Fueyo
PLoS One, 2014journals.plos.org
Introduction Synovial fibroblasts (SF) undergo phenotypic changes in rheumatoid arthritis
(RA) that contribute to inflammatory joint destruction. This study was undertaken to evaluate
the clinical and functional significance of ectopic podoplanin (gp38) expression by RA SF.
Methods Expression of gp38 and its CLEC2 receptor was analyzed by
immunohistochemistry in synovial arthroscopic biopsies from RA patients and normal and
osteoarthritic controls. Correlation between gp38 expression and RA clinicopathological …
Introduction
Synovial fibroblasts (SF) undergo phenotypic changes in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) that contribute to inflammatory joint destruction. This study was undertaken to evaluate the clinical and functional significance of ectopic podoplanin (gp38) expression by RA SF.
Methods
Expression of gp38 and its CLEC2 receptor was analyzed by immunohistochemistry in synovial arthroscopic biopsies from RA patients and normal and osteoarthritic controls. Correlation between gp38 expression and RA clinicopathological variables was analyzed. In patients rebiopsied after anti-TNF-α therapy, changes in gp38 expression were determined. Platelet-SF coculture and gp38 silencing in SF were used to analyze the functional contribution of gp38 to SF migratory and invasive properties, and to SF platelet crosstalk.
Results
gp38 was abundantly but variably expressed in RA, and it was undetectable in normal synovial tissues. Among clinicopathologigal RA variables, significantly increased gp38 expression was only found in patients with lymphoid neogenesis (LN), and RF or ACPA autoantibodies. Cultured synovial but not dermal fibroblasts showed strong constitutive gp38 expression that was further induced by TNF-α. In RA patients, anti-TNF-α therapy significantly reduced synovial gp38 expression. In RA synovium, CLEC2 receptor expression was only observed in platelets. gp38 silencing in cultured SF did not modify their migratory and invasive properties but reduced the expression of IL-6 and IL-8 genes induced by SF-platelet interaction.
Conclusions
In RA, synovial expression of gp38 is strongly associated to LN and it is reduced after anti-TNF-α therapy. Interaction between gp38 and CLEC2 platelet receptor is feasible in RA synovium in vivo and can specifically contribute to gene expression by SF.
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