AIM/CD5L ameliorates autoimmune arthritis by promoting removal of inflammatory DAMPs at the lesions

Keisuke Yasuda, Shieri Shimodan,Natsumi Maehara,Aika Hirota, Ruka Iijima,Akemi Nishijima,Haruka Mori, Ran Toyama,Atsumi Ito, Yuri Yoshikawa,Satoko Arai,Toru Miyazaki

JOURNAL OF AUTOIMMUNITY(2024)

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摘要
The hallmark of autoimmune arthritis is the preceding autoantibody production and the following synovial inflammation with hyperplasia and tissue destruction of the joints. The joint inflammation is mediated not only by effector lymphocytes and auto-antibodies but also chronic activation of innate immunity, particularly promoted by the danger-associated molecular patterns (DAMPs). Here we show that apoptosis inhibitor of macrophage (AIM, also called CD5L) protein regulates arthritis by promoting removal of lesional DAMPs both physiologically and therapeutically. When the autoimmune arthritis was promoted by injecting a cocktail of anticollagen antibodies without type-II collagen immunization, AIM-deficient (AIM-/- ) mice exhibited more exacerbated and sustained swelling at multiple joints with greater synovial hyperplasia and bone erosion than wildtype mice. Administration of recombinant AIM (rAIM) reduced S100A8/9, a major DAMP known to be involved in arthritis progression, and decreased various inflammatory cytokines at the lesions in antibody-injected AIM-/mice, leading to marked prevention of arthritis symptoms. In human rheumatoid arthritis (RA) patients, AIM was more activated via dissociating from IgM-pentamer in response to DAMPs-mediated inflammation both in serum and synovial fluid than in healthy individuals or non-autoimmune osteoarthritis patients, suggesting a diseaseregulatory potency of AIM also in human RA patients. Thus, our study implied a therapeutic availability of rAIM to prevent arthritis symptoms targeting DAMPs.
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