4.7 Article

Targeting early changes in the synovial microenvironment: a new class of immunomodulatory therapy?

Journal

ANNALS OF THE RHEUMATIC DISEASES
Volume 78, Issue 2, Pages 186-191

Publisher

BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/annrheumdis-2018-214294

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Funding

  1. Nascient Ltd
  2. Arthritis Research UK Fellowships [20003, 18547]
  3. Arthritis Research UK programme [19791]
  4. Arthritis Research UK Rheumatoid Arthritis Pathogenesis Centre of Excellence [20298]
  5. Kennedy Trust for Rheumatology Research
  6. National Institute for Health Research/Wellcome Trust Clinical Research Facility at University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust
  7. SGC

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Objectives Controlled immune responses rely on integrated crosstalk between cells and their microenvironment. We investigated whether targeting proinflammatory signals from the extracellular matrix that persist during pathological inflammation provides a viable strategy to treat rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Methods Monoclonal antibodies recognising the fibrinogen-like globe (FBG) of tenascin-C were generated by phage display. Clones that neutralised FBG activation of toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4), without impacting pathogenic TLR4 activation, were epitope mapped by crystallography. Antibodies stained synovial biopsies of patients at different stages of RA development. Antibody efficacy in preventing RA synovial cell cytokine release, and in modulating collagen-induced arthritis in rats, was assessed. Results Tenascin-C is expressed early in the development of RA, even before disease diagnosis, with higher levels in the joints of people with synovitis who eventually developed RA than in people whose synovitis spontaneously resolved. Anti-FBG antibodies inhibited cytokine release by RA synovial cells and prevented disease progression and tissue destruction during collagen-induced arthritis. Conclusions Early changes in the synovial microenvironment contribute to RA progression; blocking proinflammatory signals from the matrix can ameliorate experimental arthritis. These data highlight a new drug class that could offer early, disease-specific immune modulation in RA, without engendering global immune suppression.

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