4.7 Article

A key role for G-CSF-induced neutrophil production and trafficking during inflammatory arthritis

Journal

BLOOD
Volume 112, Issue 13, Pages 5193-5201

Publisher

AMER SOC HEMATOLOGY
DOI: 10.1182/blood-2008-02-139535

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Funding

  1. Reid Charitable Trusts (Melbourne, Australia)
  2. National Health and Medical Research Council (Canberra, Australia [461243, 461219, 215408, 356213, 461287]

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We have previously shown that G-CSF-deficient (G-CSF-/-) mice are markedly protected from collagen-induced arthritis ( CIA), which is the major murine model of rheumatoid arthritis, and now investigate the mechanisms by which G-CSF can promote inflammatory disease. Serum G-CSF levels were significantly elevated during CIA. Reciprocal bone marrow chimeras using G-CSF-/-, G-CSFR-/-, and wild-type (WT) mice identified nonhematopoietic cells as the major producers of G-CSF and hematopoietic cells as the major responders to G-CSF during CIA. Protection against CIA was associated with relative neutropenia. Depletion of neutrophils or blockade of the neutrophil adhesion molecule, Mac-1, dramatically attenuated the progression of established CIA in WT mice. Intravital microscopy of the microcirculation showed that both local and systemic administration of G-CSF significantly increased leukocyte trafficking into tissues in vivo. G-CSF induced trafficking was Mac-1 dependent, and G-CSF up-regulated CD11b expression on neutrophils. Multiphoton microscopy of synovial vessels in the knee joint during CIA revealed significantly fewer adherent Gr-1(+) neutrophils in G-CSF-/- mice compared with WT mice. These data confirm a central proinflammatory role for G-CSF in the pathogenesis of inflammatory arthritis, which may be due to the promotion of neutrophil trafficking into inflamed joints, in addition to G-CSF induced neutrophil production. (Blood. 2008; 112: 5193-5201)

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