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Expression of cytokine mRNA and protein in joints and lymphoid organs during the course of rat antigen-induced arthritis

Dirk Pohlers1 email, Angela Siegling2 email, Eberhard Buchner3 email, Carsten B Schmidt-Weber4 email, Ernesta Palombo-Kinne1 email, Frank Emmrich5 email, Rolf Bräuer6 email and Raimund W Kinne1 email

1Experimental Rheumatology Unit, Friedrich Schiller University Jena, Jena, Germany

2EUCODIS GmbH, Vienna, Austria

3Pfizer GmbH, Karlsruhe, Germany

4Swiss Institute for Asthma and Allergy Research (SIAF), Davos, Switzerland

5Institute of Clinical Immunology and Transfusion Medicine, University of Leipzig, Leipzig, Germany

6Institute of Pathology, Friedrich Schiller University Jena, Jena, Germany

author email corresponding author email

Arthritis Research & Therapy 2005, 7:R445-R457doi:10.1186/ar1689

Published: 17 February 2005

Abstract

Cytokine expression was assessed during antigen-induced arthritis (AIA) in synovial membrane (SM), inguinal lymph node (LN), and spleen using competitive RT-PCR and sandwich ELISA. In the SM, early elevations of IL-1β and IL-6 mRNA (by 6 hours; 450- and 200-fold, respectively) correlated with the joint swelling; a 6-fold increase in tumor necrosis factor α (TNFα) was not significant. Not only IL-2 and IFN-γ (which increased 10,000-fold and 200-fold, respectively), but also IL-5 and IL-10, increased acutely (6 hours – day 1; 3-fold and 35-fold, respectively) in the SM. In general, the protein levels in the SM for IL-1β, IL-6, TNFα, IFN-γ, IL-4, and IL-10 (increase from 4-fold to 15-fold) matched the course of mRNA expression. In the inguinal LN, there were early mRNA elevations of IL-6 (a 2.5-fold increase by 6 hours, which correlated positively with the joint swelling) and IL-2 (4-fold by 6 hours), as well as later rises of IL-4 and IL-5 (2.5- and 4-fold, respectively, by day 3). No significant elevations of the corresponding proteins in this tissue were observed, except for IL-1β (by day 6) and IL-10 (by day 1). In the spleen, there were significant mRNA elevations at 6 hours of IL-1β (1.5-fold), IL-6 (4-fold; positively correlated with the joint swelling), IFN-γ (3-fold), and IL-2 (7- to 10-fold). IL-5 and IL-10 (2- and 3-fold, respectively) peaked from 6 hours to day 3 in the spleen. Increases of the corresponding proteins were significant in comparison with day 0 only in the case of IL-2 (day 6). By day 6 (transition to the chronic phase), the mRNA for cytokines declined to or below prearthritis levels in all the tissues studied except for IL-1β in the SM and IL-6 in the spleen. AIA is thus characterized by four phenomena: early synovial activation of macrophages, T helper (Th)1-like, and Th2-like cells; late, well-segregated Th2-like responses in the inguinal LN; late, overlapping Th1-like/Th2-like peaks in the spleen; and chronic elevation of synovial IL-1β mRNA and spleen IL-6 mRNA.


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