학술논문

N-glycan in the variable region of monoclonal ACPA (CCP-Ab1) promotes the exacerbation of experimental arthritis.
Document Type
Article
Source
Rheumatology. Dec2023, Vol. 62 Issue 12, p3968-3977. 10p.
Subject
*POLYSACCHARIDES
*AUTOANTIBODIES
*IN vitro studies
*IMMUNOGLOBULINS
*OSTEOCLASTS
*IN vivo studies
*ANIMAL experimentation
*BONE resorption
*MONOCLONAL antibodies
*COMPARATIVE studies
*RHEUMATOID arthritis
*RESEARCH funding
*MICROBIAL virulence
*BONE marrow
*MICE
*PEPTIDES
Language
ISSN
1462-0324
Abstract
Objectives The variable region of most ACPA IgG molecules in the serum of RA patients carries N -glycan (N -glycanV). To analyse the pathogenicity of N -glycanV of ACPAs, we analysed the pathogenicity of a monoclonal ACPA, CCP-Ab1, with or without N -glycanV, which had been isolated from a patient with RA. Methods CCP-Ab1 with no N -glycosylation site in the variable region (CCP-Ab1 N-rev) was generated, and antigen binding, the effect on in vitro differentiation of osteoclasts from bone marrow mononuclear cells of autoimmune arthritis–prone SKG mice (the cell size of TRAP+ cells and bone resorption capacity) and the in vivo effect on the onset or exacerbation of autoimmune arthritis in SKG mice were evaluated in comparison with glycosylated CCP-Ab1. Results Amino acid residues in citrullinated peptide (cfc1), which are essential for binding to CCP-Ab1 N-rev and original CCP-Ab1, were almost identical. The size of TRAP+ cells was significantly larger and osteoclast bone resorption capacity was enhanced in the presence of CCP-Ab1, but not with CCP-Ab1 N-rev. This enhancing activity required the sialic acid of the N -glycan and Fc region of CCP-Ab1. CCP-Ab1, but not CCP-Ab1 N-rev, induced the exacerbation of experimental arthritis in the SKG mouse model. Conclusions These data showed that N -glycanV was required for promoting osteoclast differentiation and bone resorption activity in both in vitro and in vivo assays. The present study demonstrated the important role of N -glycanV in the exacerbation of experimental arthritis by ACPAs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]