Arthritis typically involves recurrence and progressive worsening at specific predilection sites, but the checkpoints between remission and persistence remain unknown. Here, we defined the molecular and cellular mechanisms of this inflammation-mediated tissue priming. Re-exposure to inflammatory stimuli caused aggravated arthritis in rodent models. Tissue priming developed locally and independently of adaptive immunity. Repeatedly stimulated primed synovial fibroblasts (SFs) exhibited enhanced metabolic activity inducing functional changes with intensified migration, invasiveness and osteoclastogenesis. Meanwhile, human SF from patients with established arthritis displayed a similar primed phenotype. Transcriptomic and epigenomic analyses as well as genetic and pharmacological targeting demonstrated that inflammatory tissue priming relies on intracellular complement C3- and C3a receptor-activation and downstream mammalian target of rapamycin- and hypoxia-inducible factor 1α-mediated metabolic SF invigoration that prevents activation-induced senescence, enhances NLRP3 inflammasome activity, and in consequence sensitizes tissue for inflammation. Our study suggests possibilities for therapeutic intervention abrogating tissue priming without immunosuppression.Copyright © 2021 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
About The Expert
Jasna Friščić
Martin Böttcher
Christiane Reinwald
Heiko Bruns
Benjamin Wirth
Samantha-Josefine Popp
Kellie Irene Walker
Jochen A Ackermann
Xi Chen
Jason Turner
Honglin Zhu
Lisa Seyler
Maximilien Euler
Philipp Kirchner
René Krüger
Arif B Ekici
Triin Major
Oliver Aust
Daniela Weidner
Anita Fischer
Fabian T Andes
Zeljka Stanojevic
Vladimir Trajkovic
Martin Herrmann
Adelheid Korb-Pap
Isabel Wank
Andreas Hess
Johnathan Winter
Viktor Wixler
Jörg Distler
Günter Steiner
Hans P Kiener
Benjamin Frey
Lasse Kling
Karim Raza
Silke Frey
Arnd Kleyer
Tobias Bäuerle
Timothy R Hughes
Anika Grüneboom
Ulrike Steffen
Gerhard Krönke
Adam P Croft
Andrew Filer
Jörg Köhl
Kerstin Klein
Christopher D Buckley
Georg Schett
Dimitrios Mougiakakos
Markus H Hoffmann
References
PubMed