| Literature DB >> 35364736 |
Essa M Sabi1, Anuja Singh2, Ziyad M Althafar3, Tapan Behl4, Aayush Sehgal2, Sukhbir Singh2, Neelam Sharma2, Saurabh Bhatia5,6, Ahmed Al-Harrasi5, Hosam M Alqahtani7, Simona Bungau8.
Abstract
Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a chronic multifactorial disease, provocative, and degenerative autoimmune condition that impacts millions of individuals around the globe. As a result of this understanding, anti-inflammatory drugs have been created, perhaps widely effective (like steroids) and highly specialized methods (including anti-TNF antibody) using biological therapies (including TNF inhibitors). Despite this, the connections between inflammatory response, articular development, and intracellular responsiveness to changes in oxygen concentration are undervalued in rheumatoid arthritis. Hypoxia, or a lack of oxygen, is thought to cause enhanced synovial angiogenesis in RA, which is mediated by some of the hypoxia-inducible factors like vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF). Substantial genetic alterations occur when the HIF regulatory factors signaling cycle is activated, allowing organelles, tissues, and species to acclimatize to decreasing oxygen saturation. The most well-characterized hypoxia-responsive transcripts are the angiogenic stimulant VEGF, whose production is greatly elevated by hypoxia in several types of cells, especially RA synovium fibroblasts. Blocking vascular endothelial growth factors has been demonstrated to be helpful in murine models of rheumatism, indicating how hypoxia could trigger the angiogenesis process, resulting in the progression of RA. These mechanisms highlight the intimate affiliation amongst hypoxia, angiogenesis, and inflammation in rheumatoid arthritis. This review will look at how hypoxia activates molecular pathways and how other pathways involving inflammatory signals develop and sustain synovitis in rheumatoid arthritis.Entities:
Keywords: Angiogenesis; Hypoxia-inducible factor; Inflammation; Regulation; Rheumatoid arthritis
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35364736 DOI: 10.1007/s10787-022-00974-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Inflammopharmacology ISSN: 0925-4692 Impact factor: 4.473