4.0 Article

The Proinflammatory Activity of Recombinant Serum Amyloid A Is Not Shared by the Endogenous Protein in the Circulation

Journal

ARTHRITIS AND RHEUMATISM
Volume 62, Issue 6, Pages 1660-1665

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/art.27440

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Funding

  1. Swedish Medical Research Council
  2. King Gustaf V's Memorial Foundation
  3. Gothenburg Medical Society
  4. Swedish Society for Medicine
  5. Inga Britt and Arne Lundberg Research Foundation
  6. Swedish State under the LUA/ALF
  7. MRC

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Objective. Elevated serum levels of the acutephase protein serum amyloid A (SAA) are a marker for active rheumatoid arthritis ( RA), and SAA can also be found in the tissues of patients with active RA. Based on a number of studies with recombinant SAA (rSAA), the protein has been suggested to be a potent proinflammatory mediator that activates human neutrophils, but whether endogenous SAA shares these proinflammatory activities has not been directly addressed. The present study was undertaken to investigate whether SAA in the plasma of patients with RA possesses proinflammatory properties and activates neutrophils in a manner similar to that of the recombinant protein. Methods. Neutrophil activation was monitored by flow cytometry, based on L-selectin shedding from cell surfaces. Whole blood samples from healthy subjects and from RA patients with highly elevated SAA levels were studied before and after stimulation with rSAA as well as purified endogenous SAA. Results. Recombinant SAA potently induced cleavage of L-selectin from neutrophils and in whole blood samples. Despite highly elevated SAA levels, L-selectin was not down-regulated on RA patient neutrophils as compared with neutrophils from healthy controls. Spiking SAA-rich whole blood samples from RA patients with rSAA, however, resulted in L-selectin shedding. In addition, SAA purified from human plasma was completely devoid of neutrophil- or macrophage-activating capacity. Conclusion. The present findings show that rSAA is proinflammatory but that this activity is not shared by endogenous SAA, either when present in the circulation of RA patients or when purified from plasma during an acute-phase response.

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