| Literature DB >> 31886309 |
Mohammed Alghamdi1,2, Doaa Alasmari1, Amjad Assiri1, Ehab Mattar1, Abdullah A Aljaddawi1, Sana G Alattas1, Elrashdy M Redwan1,3.
Abstract
A protein undergoes many types of posttranslation modification. Citrullination is one of these modifications, where an arginine amino acid is converted to a citrulline amino acid. This process depends on catalytic enzymes such as peptidylarginine deiminase enzymes (PADs). This modification leads to a charge shift, which affects the protein structure, protein-protein interactions, and hydrogen bond formation, and it may cause protein denaturation. The irreversible citrullination reaction is not limited to a specific protein, cell, or tissue. It can target a wide range of proteins in the cell membrane, cytoplasm, nucleus, and mitochondria. Citrullination is a normal reaction during cell death. Apoptosis is normally accompanied with a clearance process via scavenger cells. A defect in the clearance system either in terms of efficiency or capacity may occur due to massive cell death, which may result in the accumulation and leakage of PAD enzymes and the citrullinated peptide from the necrotized cell which could be recognized by the immune system, where the immunological tolerance will be avoided and the autoimmune disorders will be subsequently triggered. The induction of autoimmune responses, autoantibody production, and cytokines involved in the major autoimmune diseases will be discussed.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31886309 PMCID: PMC6899306 DOI: 10.1155/2019/7592851
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunol Res ISSN: 2314-7156 Impact factor: 4.818
Protein shape and arginine position effect on citrullination efficiency.
| Arginine position | Kinetic of citrullination | Protein shape | Kinetics of citrullination |
|---|---|---|---|
| N-Arg-Glu-C | Hardly citrullinated |
| Difficult to be citrullinated |
| N-Arg-Asp-C | Highly and efficiently citrullination (100%) |
| The most liable form for citrullination |
| N-Arg-Arg-C | Arg near C-terminus excluding MBP case | Disordered | Easily and efficiently citrullinated (95%) |
| N-Pro-Arg-Pro-C | Never citrullinated |
| No data available |
| Arg close to N-terminus | Difficult to be citrullinated |
Percentage of similarity (homology) between PADs, isoelectric point (pI), and calculated molecular mass (kDa) of human PADs.
| % homology | PAD1 | PAD2 | PAD3 | PAD4 | PAD6 | Pl | kDa |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PAD1 | 100 | 65 | 68 | 71 | 59 | 6.01 | 74.6 |
| PAD2 | 100 | 67 | 65 | 59 | 5.4 | 75.3 | |
| PAD3 | 100 | 68 | 60 | 5.25 | 74.6 | ||
| PAD4 | 61 | 6.25 | 74.0 | ||||
| PAD6 | 100 | 4.97 | 77.7 |
Body distribution, target substrates, and normal physiology and pathology of PADs.
| Isotype | Expression | Substrates | Biological process | Pathological process |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PAD1 | Epidermis and uterus | Keratin K1 and filaggrin | Cornification of epidermal tissues | Psoriasis |
| PAD2 | Widely expressed: pituitary gland, brain, uterus, spleen, spinal cord, and skeletal muscle | MBP, GFAP, vimentin, and | Plasticity of the CNS, transcription regulation, innate immunity, and female fertility | Multiple sclerosis, rheumatoid arthritis, Alzheimer's disease, and prion disease |
| PAD3 | Epidermis and hair follicles | Filaggrin and trichohyalin | Regulation of epidermal functions | Unknown |
| PAD4 | Neutrophils, monocytes, macrophages, mammary glands, epithelial cells, and tumors | Histones H2A, H3, and H4; ING4; p300/CBP; nucleophosmin; and nuclear Lamin C | Chromatin decondensation, transcription regulation, tumor formation, innate immune response, and NETosis process | Rheumatoid arthritis, multiple sclerosis, and cancers |
| PAD6 | Eggs, ovary, early fetus, and testis tissues | Protamine | Ovocyte, sperm chromatin decondensation, female productivity, cytoskeleton formation, early fetal growth, and target for contraceptive drugs | Unknown |
Major characteristics of MS courses as classified by [131].
| Clinical form | Disease course |
|---|---|
| Clinically isolated syndrome (CIS) | Identified by acute or subacute onset of monophasic episode suggestive of MS that does not complete the current MS criteria. The episode persists for more than 24 h and commonly impacts the optic nerve, brain stem, or spinal cord |
| About 30% up to 70% of the CIS cases obtain MS | |
| About 10%-85% of patients with optic neuritis can develop MS | |
| About 50%-60% of patients with brainstem syndromes and optic neuritis can develop MS | |
| About 40%-60% of patients with spinal cord can develop MS | |
| The age of initial diagnosis is between 20 and 45 years | |
| Women to men ratio ranging from 2 : 1 to 5 : 1 | |
|
| |
| Relapsing-remitting MS (RRMS) | Manifested by relapses persisting for days to weeks, followed by complete or partial remissions continuing for months or years |
| Represents about 85% of cases | |
| The age of initial diagnosis between 20 and 30 years | |
| Women to men ratio between 2 : 1 and 3 : 1 | |
|
| |
| Secondary progressive MS (SPMS) | Manifested by increasing of disability after the first relapsing period of the disease |
| About 75% of RRMS cases developed into SPMS within the first 15 years of diagnosis | |
|
| |
| Primary progressive MS (PPMS) | Identified by constant functional deterioration from the beginning of the disease |
| Represent about 15% of cases | |
| Appears after RRMS (10 years) | |
| Women to men ratio 1 : 1 | |
Classification criteria for rheumatoid arthritis established by the American College of Rheumatology (ACR) in 1987.
| Criteria | Definition |
|---|---|
| Morning stiffness | Morning stiffness persisting at least 1 hour before maximal progression |
| Arthritis of 3 or more joint areas | Presence of swelling in three or more joints, including the right or left PIP, MCP, wrist, elbow, knee, ankle, and MTP joints |
| Arthritis of hand joints | Swelling of one or more of hand joints, including wrist, MCP, or PIP joint |
| Symmetric arthritis | Concomitant involvement of the same joint areas on both sides of the body |
| Rheumatoid nodules | Clinical observation of subcutaneous nodules over bony prominences, extensor surfaces, or in juxta-articular bones as seen by a physician |
| Serum rheumatoid factor | Positive or elevated level of serum rheumatoid factor measured by laboratory method |
| Radiographic changes | Radiographic changes involve erosions in joint on posteroanterior hand and wrist, also displaying thinning of juxta-articular region |
Saudi population (65 years and over) organized by age groups.
| Age groups | Males | Females | Total |
|---|---|---|---|
| 65-69 | 150,777 | 159,582 | 310,359 |
| 70-74 | 10,005 | 112,813 | 222,818 |
| 75-79 | 71,142 | 72,937 | 144,079 |
| Above 80 | 85,468 | 91,557 | 177,025 |
| Total | 417,392 | 436,889 | 854,281 |
Saudi population (65 years and over) by age groups and chronic diseases.
| Age groups | Alzheimer disease | Diabetes mellitus | Hypertension | Heart disease | Kidney disease |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 65-69 | 410 | 108,765 | 105,450 | 23,070 | 6122 |
| 70-74 | 2802 | 90,796 | 82,160 | 22,779 | 3775 |
| 75-79 | 2541 | 64,079 | 65,473 | 15,678 | 3358 |
| Above 80 | 7590 | 68,902 | 76,751 | 27,808 | 5076 |
| Total | 13,343 | 332,542 | 329,834 | 89,335 | 18,331 |
The immunological parameters included in the Systemic Lupus International Collaborating Clinics (SLICC) criteria.
| Serological test | Result description |
|---|---|
| Antinuclear antibody (ANA) | Positive (exceeds reference range) |
| Anti-double-stranded antibody (anti-ds) | Positive (exceeds reference range) |
| Anti-Smith antibody (anti-Sm) | Positive for anti-Sm |
| Antiphospholipid antibody | |
| (i) Lupus anticoagulant antibody (LA) | Positive for LA |
| (ii) Antibodies against cardiolipin (aCL) | Medium-high titer for aCL (IgG, IgA, and IgM) |
| (iii) Antibodies against | Positive for anti- |
| (iv) Rapid plasma regain (RPR) | False positive (in the absence of hemolytic anemia) |
| Complements | Low level of C3, C4, or CHO50 |
| Direct Coombs' test (DCT) | Positive (clumping of RBCs) |
2010 ACR/EULAR classification criteria for rheumatoid arthritis. A score ≥ 6 is required for the diagnosis of a patient with confirmed RA.
| Joint involvement | Score (0-5) | Serology | Score (0-3) | Period of symptoms | Score (0-1) | Acute-phase reactants | Score (0-1) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 large joint | 0 | Negative RF and negative ACPA | 0 | <6 weeks | 0 | Normal level of CRP and ESR | 0 |
| 2–10 large joints | 1 | Strong positive RF or week positive ACPA | 2 | ≥6 weeks | 1 | Abnormal level of CRP and ESR | 1 |
| 1–3 small joints (with or without accounting large joints) | 2 | Strong positive RF or strong positive ACPA | 3 | ||||
| 4–10 small joints (with or without accounting large joints) | 3 | ||||||
| >10 joints (with minimum 1 small joint) | 5 |
Figure 1The chemical reaction of (a) citrullination and (b) carbamylation.
Figure 2PAD gene cluster organization. Ideograms showing the location and orientation of the PAD gene clusters of human chromosome 1, mouse chromosome 4, and rat chromosome 5.
Figure 3(a) Myelinated nerve fiber is shown with salutatory conduction of action potential. (b) Transverse section of myelinated axon at the internode. (c) Bilayer membranes and with integrated MBP and PLP. (d) Phosphatidylethanolamine (PE).
Figure 4The role of MBP citrullination involved in MS pathogenesis.
Figure 5Cross-section of the human brain: normal individual brain (left) and brain from an AD patient (right). Overall shrinkage of brain tissue seen in AD brain with observed expanded sulci and shrinkage of the gyri. In addition, the ventricles seen to be enlarged.
Figure 6Schematic cross-section of BBB showing the cerebral capillary associated with vascular cells (pericytes and endothelial cells), glial cells (astrocytes), and neurons.
Figure 7Normal brain (left) and AD brain (right) showing the extracellular (β-amyloid plaques) and intracellular (neurofibrillary tangles).
Figure 8Neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs).
Figure 9Immune dysregulation in SLE. Above: balanced immune tolerance between T-effector cells and Tregs. Below: insufficiency and deficiency of Tregs result in autoimmunity.
Distribution and incidence of RA.
| Studied group | Incidence ratio |
|---|---|
| Females vs males | 2 : 1 to 3 : 1 |
| Caucasian from North America | 100 case per 100,000 |
| Rural and urban Africans | 20-90 case per 100,000 |
| Native Americans | 500 case per 100,000 |
| Asians | 20-45 case per 100,000 |
| Caucasian from Europe | 5-89 case per 100,000 |
| Latin America | 10-50 case per 100,000 |
| Middle East countries | 10-50 case per 100,000 |
Figure 10Schematic view of (a) normal joint and (b) RA joint.