4.2 Article

Non-invasive monitoring of arthritis treatment response via targeting of tyrosine-phosphorylated annexin A2 in chondrocytes

Journal

ARTHRITIS RESEARCH & THERAPY
Volume 23, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s13075-021-02643-3

Keywords

Near-infrared fluorescent imaging; Treatment response monitoring; Inflammatory arthritis; Rheumatoid arthritis

Categories

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [AR076820, AR073752, R01 EB030987, R01 CA260855, U54 CA199092, R01 EB021048, P30 CA091842, P30 CA091842-19S3, P30 AR073752, R01 AR067491, S10 OD027042, S10 OD016237, S10 RR031625, S10 OD020129]
  2. Department of Defense Breast Cancer Research Program [W81XWH-16-1-0286]
  3. Siteman Investment Program (SIP) Research Development Award
  4. VA Merit Review [I01 BX005075]

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LS301 selectively accumulates in regions of joint pathology in mouse models of RA, with a positive correlation with disease severity. Whole-body near-infrared imaging with LS301 allows tracking of spontaneous disease remission and therapeutic response after dexamethasone treatment. Histological analysis shows preferential accumulation of LS301 within chondrocytes and articular cartilage in arthritic mice, with colocalization observed between LS301 and pANXA2 in joint tissue.
Background The development and optimization of therapies for rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is currently hindered by a lack of methods for early non-invasive monitoring of treatment response. Annexin A2, an inflammation-associated protein whose presence and phosphorylation levels are upregulated in RA, represents a potential molecular target for tracking RA treatment response. Methods LS301, a near-infrared dye-peptide conjugate that selectively targets tyrosine 23-phosphorylated annexin A2 (pANXA2), was evaluated for its utility in monitoring disease progression, remission, and early response to drug treatment in mouse models of RA by fluorescence imaging. The intraarticular distribution and localization of LS301 relative to pANXA2 was determined by histological and immunohistochemical methods. Results In mouse models of spontaneous and serum transfer-induced inflammatory arthritis, intravenously administered LS301 showed selective accumulation in regions of joint pathology including paws, ankles, and knees with positive correlation between fluorescent signal and disease severity by clinical scoring. Whole-body near-infrared imaging with LS301 allowed tracking of spontaneous disease remission and the therapeutic response after dexamethasone treatment. Histological analysis showed preferential accumulation of LS301 within the chondrocytes and articular cartilage in arthritic mice, and colocalization was observed between LS301 and pANXA2 in the joint tissue. Conclusions We demonstrate that fluorescence imaging with LS301 can be used to monitor the progression, remission, and early response to drug treatment in mouse models of RA. Given the ease of detecting LS301 with portable optical imaging devices, the agent may become a useful early treatment response reporter for arthritis diagnosis and drug evaluation.

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