4 research outputs found

    A synthetic corticosteroid, dexamethasone regulates generation of soluble form of interleukin-6 receptor of human lymphocytes, in vitro

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    In contrast to most of the soluble cytokine receptor antagonists properties, the soluble IL-6 receptor (sIL-6R) occurring in various body fluids of healthy persons and patients with various diseases is an agonist. The enhancing effect is due to its ability to form complex with IL-6 and to bind to gp130 making constitutively IL-6 receptor negative cells responsive for IL-6. The generation as well as the functional role of soluble IL-6 receptor is poorly understood. Earlier, we found that the sIL-6R levels in sera of patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and rheumatoid arthritis (RA) were higher than those of the control group measured by ELISA sandwich technology. In the present study we detected different levels of sIL-6R in the supernatants of lymphocyte cultures of healthy persons and patients with RA as well as SLE. Moreover, we found, that in vitro dexamethasone treatment stimulated generation of sIL-6R in both healthy persons and in active SLE, while it strongly suppressed production of sIL-6R in both RA groups. At mRNA level, we found that in SLE both the IL-6R mRNA encoding the membrane spanning and alternatively spliced (soluble) variants increased. Surprisingly, the strong decrease of sIL6R protein in RA was not found at mRNA level

    Recognition of new citrulline-containing peptide epitopes by autoantibodies produced in vivo and in vitro by B cells of rheumatoid arthritis patients

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    Anti-citrullinated peptide/protein antibodies (ACPAs) are highly sensitive and specific markers of rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Identification of peptide epitopes that may detect different subgroups of RA patients might have diagnostic and prognostic significance. We have investigated citrulline- and arginine-containing peptide pairs derived from filaggrin, collagen or vimentin, and compared this citrulline-peptide panel with the serological assays conventionally used to detect ACPAs. Furthermore, we studied if the same citrulline-peptides identify antibody-secreting cells in in vitro cultures of RA B cells. Recognition of citrulline- and arginine-containing filaggrin, vimentin and collagen peptide epitopes were tested by Multipin ELISA system, by indirect ELISA and by a peptide-specific microarray. B cells were purified from blood by negative selection; antibody-producing cells were enumerated by ELISPOT assay. The panel composed of citrulline-peptide epitopes of filaggrin, collagen and vimentin was recognized by RA sera with a sensitivity and specificity comparable with the currently used tests. Moreover, the combined citrulline-peptide panel including the new short epitope peptide of filaggrin, fil311-315, also identified nearly one-third of RA cases that were negative for antibodies against cyclic citrullinated peptides, mutated citrullinated vimentin or for rheumatoid factor. The results with the peptide-specific microarray have shown that although most ACPAs recognizing the four citrulline peptides are IgG, some of them specifically recognizing citrulline-containing filaggrin peptides (fil311-315 and fil306-326) are IgM, and so may be produced either by newly formed activated B cells or by unswitched B memory cells. Furthermore, the citrulline-peptides of filaggrin and vimentin detect ACPA-producing cells, and so could also be applied to study the B cells of RA patients
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