4.8 Article

MIF allele-dependent regulation of the MIF coreceptor CD44 and role in rheumatoid arthritis

出版社

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1612717113

关键词

immunogenetics; autoimmunity; MIF; CD44; CD74

资金

  1. National Institutes of Health [AR049610, AR050498, T32 HL007778]
  2. Alliance for Lupus Research
  3. FAMRI Grant [CIA82384]
  4. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) [SFB1123]
  5. DFG within the framework of the Munich Cluster for Systems Neurology [EXC 1010 SyNergy]
  6. National Research Foundation of Korea (Ministry of Education, Science and Technology) [2014R1A6A3A04054066, 2014R1A2A1A11049812, 2015R1A3A2032927]
  7. National Research Foundation of Korea [2014R1A6A3A04054066, 2014R1A2A1A11049812] Funding Source: Korea Institute of Science & Technology Information (KISTI), National Science & Technology Information Service (NTIS)

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Fibroblast-like synoviocytes mediate joint destruction in rheumatoid arthritis and exhibit sustained proinflammatory and invasive properties. CD44 is a polymorphic transmembrane protein with defined roles inmatrix interaction and tumor invasion that is also a signaling coreceptor for macrophage migration inhibitory factor (MIF), which engages cell surface CD74. High-expression MIF alleles (rs5844572) are associated with rheumatoid joint erosion, but whether MIF signaling through the CD74/CD44 receptor complex promotes upstream autoimmune responses or contributes directly to synovial joint destruction is unknown. We report here the functional regulation of CD44 by an autocrine pathway in synovial fibroblasts that is driven by high-expression MIF alleles to up-regulate an inflammatory and invasive phenotype. MIF increases CD44 expression, promotes its recruitment into a functional signal transduction complex, and stimulates alternative exon splicing, leading to expression of the CD44v3-v6 isoforms associated with oncogenic invasion. CD44 recruitment into the MIF receptor complex, downstream MAPK and RhoA signaling, and invasive phenotype require MIF and CD74 and are reduced by MIF pathway antagonists. These data support a functional role for high-MIF expression alleles and the two-component CD74/CD44 MIF receptor in rheumatoid arthritis and suggest that pharmacologic inhibition of this pathway may offer a specific means to interfere with progressive joint destruction.

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