TNF plays a key role in immune-mediated inflammatory diseases including rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and spondyloarthritis (SpA). It remains incompletely understood how TNF can lead to different disease phenotypes such as destructive peripheral polysynovitis in RA versus axial and peripheral osteoproliferative inflammation in SpA. We observed a marked increase of transmembrane ™ versus soluble (s) TNF in SpA versus RA together with a decrease in the enzymatic activity of ADAM17. In contrast with the destructive polysynovitis observed in classical TNF overexpression models, mice overexpressing tmTNF developed axial and peripheral joint disease with synovitis, enthesitis, and osteitis. Histological and radiological assessment evidenced marked endochondral new bone formation leading to joint ankylosis over time. SpA-like inflammation, but not osteoproliferation, was dependent on TNF-receptor I and mediated by stromal tmTNF overexpression. Collectively, these data indicate that TNF can drive distinct inflammatory pathologies. We propose that tmTNF is responsible for the key pathological features of SpA.© 2020 Kaaij et al.
About The Expert
Merlijn H Kaaij
Melissa N van Tok
Iris C Blijdorp
Carmen A Ambarus
Michael Stock
Désiree Pots
Véronique L Knaup
Marietta Armaka
Eleni Christodoulou-Vafeiadou
Tessa K van Melsen
Huriatul Masdar
Harry J P P Eskes
Nataliya G Yeremenko
George Kollias
Georg Schett
Sander W Tas
Leonie M van Duivenvoorde
Dominique L P Baeten
References
PubMed