4.7 Article

Anti-CXCL4 Antibody Reactivity Is Present in Systemic Sclerosis (SSc) and Correlates with the SSc Type I Interferon Signature

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms21145102

Keywords

autoantibodies; CXCL4; type I interferon; lung fibrosis; innate immunity; adaptive immunity

Funding

  1. Ernst et Lucie Schmidheiny Foundation, Geneva, Switzerland
  2. Carlos and Elsie de Reuter Foundation
  3. Centre Medical Universitaire, Geneva, Switzerland
  4. Ricerca Finalizzata, Ministry of Health, Italy [CO-2013-02356463]
  5. Swiss National Found, Switzerland [310030-159999]
  6. National Psoriasis Fundation, USA
  7. ISS-Ricerca Corrente
  8. Bangerter-Rhyner Foundation, Switzerland

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Systemic sclerosis (SSc) is characterized by skin/internal organ fibrosis, vasculopathy and autoimmunity. Chemokine (C-X-C motif) ligand 4 (CXCL4) is an SSc biomarker, predicting unfavorable prognosis and lung fibrosis. CXCL4 binds DNA/RNA and favors interferon (IFN)-alpha production by plasmacytoid dendritic cells (pDCs), contributing to the type I IFN (IFN-I) signature in SSc patients. However, whether CXCL4 is an autoantigen in SSc is unknown. Here, we show that at least half of SSc patients show consistent antibody reactivity to CXCL4. T-cell proliferation to CXCL4, tested in a limited number of patients, correlates with anti-CXCL4 antibody reactivity. Antibodies to CXCL4 mostly correlate with circulating IFN-alpha levels and are significantly higher in patients with lung fibrosis in two independent SSc cohorts. Antibodies to CXCL4 implement the CXCL4-DNA complex's effect on IFN-alpha production by pDCs; CXCL4-DNA/RNA complexes stimulate purified human B-cells to become antibody-secreting plasma cells in vitro. These data indicate that CXCL4 is indeed an autoantigen in SSc and suggest that CXCL4, and CXCL4-specific autoantibodies, can fuel a harmful loop: CXCL4-DNA/RNA complexes induce IFN-alpha in pDCs and direct B-cell stimulation, including the secretion of anti-CXCL4 antibodies. Anti-CXCL4 antibodies may further increase pDC stimulation and IFN-alpha release in vivo, creating a vicious cycle which sustains the SSc IFN-I signature and general inflammation.

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