| Literature DB >> 30805340 |
Raquel Celis1, Andrea Cuervo1, Julio Ramírez1, Juan D Cañete1.
Abstract
Psoriatic arthritis (PsA) is an immuno-inflammatory disease with a heterogeneous clinical presentation as affects musculoskeletal tissues (arthritis, enthesitis, spondylitis), skin (psoriasis) and, less frequently, eye (uveitis) and bowel (inflammatory bowel disease). It has been suggested that distinct affected tissues could exhibit different immune-inflammatory pathways so complicating the understanding of the physiopathology of psoriatic disease as well as its treatment. Despite of the key pathogenic and clinical relevance that enthesitis has in PsA, peripheral arthritis is more easily perceived. At the macroscopic level, PsA synovitis has predominantly tortuous, bushy vessels, whereas rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is characterized by mainly straight, branching vessels so reflecting prominent neo-angiogenesis in PsA. Synovial biopsies have demonstrated a similar cellular and molecular picture in PsA and RA, although some differences have been reported at the group level, as higher density of vessels, CD163+ macrophages, neutrophils and mast cells in PsA. In fact, synovial IL-17+ mast cells are significantly increased in PsA and produce more IL-17A compared with RA, and a proof of concept study supports its relevant role in the synovitis of SpA, included PsA. As firstly reported in RA, synovial lymphoid neogenesis is found also in the same proportion of PsA as in RA patients, despite the lack of autoantibodies in PsA. These lymphoid structures are associated with activation of the IL-23/Th17 pathway in RA and seemly in PsA, which could be useful to stratify RA patients. Immunohistochemical and transcriptomic methodologies have still not found synovial biomarkers useful to distinguish psoriatic from rheumatoid synovitis at the patient level. However, modern methodologies, as MALDI-Mass Spectrometry Imaging, applied to the study of synovial tissue have revealed metabolic and lipid signatures which could support clinical decision-making in the diagnosis of PsA and RA and to go further toward the personalized medicine.Entities:
Keywords: immunohistochemistry; macrophage-polarization; mass spectrometry image; microarrays; psoriatic arthritis; rheumatoid arthritis; synovitis
Year: 2019 PMID: 30805340 PMCID: PMC6378889 DOI: 10.3389/fmed.2019.00014
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Med (Lausanne) ISSN: 2296-858X
Differences between PsA and RA.
| Clinical | Asymmetrical arthritis lower limbs | Symmetrical MCP and wrist joints |
| Genetics | HLA-B38, -B39, and | HLA-DRB1 |
| Pathogenesis | ||
| Autoantibodies | No | ACPA and RF |
| Synovial immunopathology | Innate immune cells | Adaptive immune cells (B and T-cells) |
| Synovial neoangiogenesis | Intense | Moderate |
| Vessels morphology | Bushy, tortuous vessels | Straight, branching vessels |
| Radiology | Bone erosion and neoformation | Erosion |
| Therapeutic targets | TNFi | TNFi |
MCP, Metacarpophalangeal; DIP, distal interphalangeal; ACPA, Anti-Citrullinated Peptide Antibody; RF, Rheumatoid Factor; IL, Interleukin; TNFi, Tumor Necrosis Factor inhibitors;
Macroscopy vessels morphology as seen by arthroscopy.
Figure 1Different features of psoriatic synovitis are represented. (A) Arthroscopic view of psoriatic synovitis with erithematous villae plenty of dilated, tortuous vessels. (B) Immunofluoresence analysis of the expression of macrophage-polarization markers in synovial tissue CD163+ macrophages from RA and PsA patients, as determined by confocal microscopy using anti-INHBA (Activin A) –a GM-CSF induced gene- and CD209 –a M-CSF induced gene- specific antibodies; nuclei were counterstained with DAPI (Courtesy of A Puig-Kröger, PhD, Madrid, Spain). (C) Staining of inflammed synovium from a patient with PsA; left: H-E staining (4x) showing a general view of synovial membrane standing out abundant vessels surrounded by folicular aggregates; right: CD20 staining (4x) highlighting the B-cell folicles in PsA synovitis. (D) Mass Spectometry Image analysis showing spatial mapping positive-lipid ion in synovium sections of PsA and RA. Scale bar shows normalized intensities (Courtesy of Prof. F Blanco, A Coruña, Spain).