| Literature DB >> 29976235 |
Siming Gao1, Xiaoxia Zuo1, Di Liu1, Yizhi Xiao1, Honglin Zhu2, Huali Zhang3, Hui Luo4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Dermatomyositis and polymyositis are the best known idiopathic inflammatory myopathies (IIMs). Classic histopathologic findings include the infiltration of inflammatory cells into muscle tissues. Neutrophil serine proteinases (NSPs) are granule-associated enzymes and play roles in inflammatory cell migration by increasing the permeability of vascular endothelial cells. In this study, we aimed to find the roles of NSPs in pathogenesis of IIMs.Entities:
Keywords: Dermatomyositis; Inflammatory cell migration; Neutrophil serine proteinases; Polymyositis; Vascular permeability
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29976235 PMCID: PMC6034343 DOI: 10.1186/s13075-018-1632-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arthritis Res Ther ISSN: 1478-6354 Impact factor: 5.156
Clinical manifestations and laboratory data of DM patients, PM patients, and controls
| Clinical characteristic | NC ( | DM ( | PM ( | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| DM vs NC | PM vs NC | DM vs PM | ||||
| Age, mean ± SD | 48.87 ± 12.40 | 50.25 ± 11.97 | 44.41 ± 11.99 | 0.606 | 0.2170 | 0.0889 |
| Sex (male/female) | 9/30 | 11/37 | 6/10 | 0.986 | 0.275 | 0.253 |
| Disease duration (months) | – | 15.41 ± 21.34 | 23.00 ± 34.25 | – | – | 0.3138 |
| CK (U/L)b | – | 842.46 ± 1969.14 | 4368.46 ± 7149.77 | – | – | 0.061 |
| LDH (U/L)c | – | 409.43 ± 267.63 | 612.02 ± 432.16 | – | – | 0.032* |
| ESR (mm/h)d | – | 57.93 ± 95.67 | 43.29 ± 34.00 | – | – | 0.542 |
| CRP (mg/L)e | – | 14.92 ± 20.72 | 12.99 ± 23.47 | – | – | 0.766 |
| IgA (mg/L)f | – | 2625.22 ± 1408.36 | 2660.25 ± 1308.82 | – | – | 0.932 |
| IgM (mg/L)g | – | 1848.37 ± 1546.84 | 1715.38 ± 874.10 | – | – | 0.748 |
| IgG (g/L)h | – | 29.58 ± 98.34 | 16.70 ± 7.69 | – | – | 0.616 |
| C3 (mg/l)u | – | 888.65 ± 238.43 | 967.25 ± 319.90 | – | – | 0.318 |
| C4 (mg/l)j | – | 243.07 ± 127.62 | 299.75 ± 347.79 | – | – | 0.534 |
| Jo-1 (positive/negative) | – | 11/37 | 5/11 | – | – | 0.505 |
| Ro-52 (positive/negative) | – | 16/32 | 2/14 | – | – | 0.108 |
| ILD (yes/no) | – | 23/23 | 3/13 | – | – | 0.029* |
| Prednisone (yes/no) | – | 46/2 | 16/0 | – | – | 0.407 |
| Cyclophosphamide (yes/no) | – | 6/42 | 1/15 | – | – | 0.488 |
| Methotrexate (yes/no) | – | 8/40 | 5/11 | – | – | 0.209 |
| Azathioprine (yes/no) | – | 9/39 | 5/11 | – | – | 0.295 |
| Mycophenolate mofetil (yes/no) | – | 4/40 | 0/16 | – | – | 0.212 |
| Thalidomide (yes/no) | – | 25/23 | 1/15 | – | – | 0.001* |
| Hydroxychloroquine (yes/no) | – | 29/19 | 4/12 | – | – | 0.014* |
| Total glucosides of | – | 16/32 | 7/9 | – | – | 0.452 |
There were no significant differences in age and gender between NC, DM patients, and PM patients
NC normal controls, DM dermatomyositis, PM polymyositis, SD standard deviation
at test, *P < 0.05 significant
bNormal range of creatine kinase (CK): 40–200 U/L
cNormal range of lactate dehydrogenase (LDH): 120–250 U/L
dNormal range of erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR): 0–20 mm/h
eNormal range of C-reactive protein (CRP): 0–8 mg/L
fNormal range of immunoglobulin A (IgA): 690–3820 mg/L
gNormal range of immunoglobulin M (IgM): 630–2770 mg/L
hNormal range of immunoglobulin G (IgG): 7.23–16.85 g/L
iNormal range of complement component 3 (C3): 850–1930 mg/L
jNormal range of complement component 4 (C4): 120–360 mg/L
Fig. 1Expression of CTSG, NE, and PR3 in DM/PM and their methylation. Relative expression of CTSG, NE, and PR3 increased in DM and PM PBMCs compared to controls at RNA level (a–c). CTSG, NE, and PR3 hypomethylated in PBMCs of DM/PM patients (d–f). No significant difference in serum levels of CTSG in DM, PM, and controls (g). Serum levels of NE and PR3 higher in DM patients and PR3 higher in PM patients than in controls (h, i). Values are mean ± SEM. CTSG cathepsin G, DM dermatomyositis, GAPDH glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, NC normal control, NE neutrophil elastase, PM polymyositis, PR3 proteinase 3
Fig. 2Expression of CTSG, NE, and PR3 in DM/PM muscle tissues. DM sections displayed typical perifascicular atrophy and inflammatory cell infiltration in perimysial area, while inflammatory cells mainly infiltrated around or invaded non-necrotic muscle fibers in HE (a). Immunohistochemistry showed an increase of CTSG protein in DM/PM muscle tissues, especially around muscle bundles (b). Expression of NE (green) and PR3 (green) also significantly higher in muscle bundles and perivascular areas of DM/PM patients shown by immunofluorescence (c, d). Nuclei (blue) stained by DAPI. CTSG cathepsin G, DM dermatomyositis, HE hematoxylin and eosin, NC normal control, NE neutrophil elastase, PM polymyositis, PR3 proteinase 3
Fig. 3Correlations between serum CTSG, NE, and PR3 levels and clinical indicators. Serum levels of CTSG in DM/PM correlated positively with levels of LDH, ESR, IgG, and IgA (a). Serum levels of NE in DM/PM correlated positively with CRP and IgM (b). Serum levels of PR3 correlated positively with CRP, ESR, IgG, and IgM in DM/PM patients (c). Patients with anti-Jo-1, with anti-Ro-52, or without ILD had lower levels of PR3 (d). CRP C-reactive protein, CTSG cathepsin G, ESR erythrocyte sedimentation rate, Ig immunoglobulin, ILD interstitial lung disease, LDH lactic dehydrogenase, NE neutrophil elastase, PR3 proteinase 3. *represents compared with patients, whose anti-Ro-52 antibody or anti-Jo-1 antibody are negative, or patients with ILD P < 0.05
Fig. 4Serum NSPs degraded VE-cadherin, disrupted tube formation, and increased permeability of HDMECs. After stimulating HDMECs with 20% serum from patients for 24 h, expression of VE-cadherin (110 kDa) decreased. VE-Cadherin expression could be neutralized by nonspecific inhibitor PMSF (a, b). After treating HDMECs with 20% serum from patients, tube formation ability of HDMECs decreased. This function of serum could be alleviated by PMSF (c, d). After treating HDMECs with 20% serum from patients, permeability of HDMECs to human PBMCs was significantly increased. This increase could be lessened by PMSF (e). Values are mean ± SEM. DM dermatomyositis, NC normal control, PM polymyositis, PMSF phenylmethylsulphonyl fluoride