| Literature DB >> 11181651 |
M Ali1, F Ponchel, K E Wilson, M J Francis, X Wu, A Verhoef, A W Boylston, D J Veale, P Emery, A F Markham, J R Lamb, J D Isaacs.
Abstract
Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a chronic, inflammatory synovitis whose pathogenesis may involve autoimmune mechanisms. Anergy is a state of T-cell nonresponsiveness characterized by downregulated IL-2 production. Paradoxically, RA T cells are hyporesponsive and proliferate poorly to antigens and mitogens, thus sharing some characteristics with anergic T cells. We analyzed the molecular basis of anergy in cloned human CD4+ T cells using differential display RT-PCR and subsequently examined the levels of differentially expressed transcripts in RA and, as control, reactive arthritis (ReA) synovium. Several transcriptional events were common to anergic T cells and RA synovium. These included downregulation of CALMODULIN:, which is critical to T-cell activation, and of cellular apoptosis susceptibility protein, which may mediate resistance to apoptosis in RA. Transcription of CALMODULIN: in RA synovium was less than 1% of that in ReA and was lower in RA synovial fluid mononuclear cells than in paired PBMCs. Following anti-TNF-alpha therapy in vivo, RA PBMC CALMODULIN: transcripts increased five- to tenfold. Pharmacological calmodulin blockade in vitro impaired antigen-specific proliferation. These data provide a link between reduced CALMODULIN: transcription and impaired T-cell responsiveness in RA. The identification of transcriptional changes common to anergic and RA synovial T cells should help interpret some of the characteristic RA cellular defects.Entities:
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Year: 2001 PMID: 11181651 PMCID: PMC199240 DOI: 10.1172/JCI8027
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Invest ISSN: 0021-9738 Impact factor: 14.808