[HTML][HTML] Mechanical strain determines the site-specific localization of inflammation and tissue damage in arthritis

I Cambré, D Gaublomme, A Burssens… - Nature …, 2018 - nature.com
I Cambré, D Gaublomme, A Burssens, P Jacques, N Schryvers, A De Muynck, L Meuris
Nature communications, 2018nature.com
Many pro-inflammatory pathways leading to arthritis have global effects on the immune
system rather than only acting locally in joints. The reason behind the regional and patchy
distribution of arthritis represents a longstanding paradox. Here we show that biomechanical
loading acts as a decisive factor in the transition from systemic autoimmunity to joint
inflammation. Distribution of inflammation and erosive disease is confined to mechano-
sensitive regions with a unique microanatomy. Curiously, this pathway relies on stromal …
Abstract
Many pro-inflammatory pathways leading to arthritis have global effects on the immune system rather than only acting locally in joints. The reason behind the regional and patchy distribution of arthritis represents a longstanding paradox. Here we show that biomechanical loading acts as a decisive factor in the transition from systemic autoimmunity to joint inflammation. Distribution of inflammation and erosive disease is confined to mechano-sensitive regions with a unique microanatomy. Curiously, this pathway relies on stromal cells but not adaptive immunity. Mechano-stimulation of mesenchymal cells induces CXCL1 and CCL2 for the recruitment of classical monocytes, which can differentiate into bone-resorbing osteoclasts. Genetic ablation of CCL2 or pharmacologic targeting of its receptor CCR2 abates mechanically-induced exacerbation of arthritis, indicating that stress-induced chemokine release by mesenchymal cells and chemo-attraction of monocytes determines preferential homing of arthritis to certain hot spots. Thus, mechanical strain controls the site-specific localisation of inflammation and tissue damage in arthritis.
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