Phosphoproteomic profiling of early rheumatoid arthritis synovium reveals active signalling pathways and differentiates inflammatory pathotypes

IF 4.9 2区 医学 Q1 Medicine Arthritis Research & Therapy Pub Date : 2024-06-12 DOI:10.1186/s13075-024-03351-4
Cankut Çubuk, Rachel Lau, Pedro Cutillas, Vinothini Rajeeve, Christopher R. John, Anna E. A. Surace, Rebecca Hands, Liliane Fossati-Jimack, Myles J. Lewis, Costantino Pitzalis
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Abstract

Kinases are intracellular signalling mediators and key to sustaining the inflammatory process in rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Oral inhibitors of Janus Kinase family (JAKs) are widely used in RA, while inhibitors of other kinase families e.g. phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K) are under development. Most current biomarker platforms quantify mRNA/protein levels, but give no direct information on whether proteins are active/inactive. Phosphoproteome analysis has the potential to measure specific enzyme activation status at tissue level. We validated the feasibility of phosphoproteome and total proteome analysis on 8 pre-treatment synovial biopsies from treatment-naive RA patients using label-free mass spectrometry, to identify active cell signalling pathways in synovial tissue which might explain failure to respond to RA therapeutics. Differential expression analysis and functional enrichment revealed clear separation of phosphoproteome and proteome profiles between lymphoid and myeloid RA pathotypes. Abundance of specific phosphosites was associated with the degree of inflammatory state. The lymphoid pathotype was enriched with lymphoproliferative signalling phosphosites, including Mammalian Target Of Rapamycin (MTOR) signalling, whereas the myeloid pathotype was associated with Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinase (MAPK) and CDK mediated signalling. This analysis also highlighted novel kinases not previously linked to RA, such as Protein Kinase, DNA-Activated, Catalytic Subunit (PRKDC) in the myeloid pathotype. Several phosphosites correlated with clinical features, such as Disease-Activity-Score (DAS)-28, suggesting that phosphosite analysis has potential for identifying novel biomarkers at tissue-level of disease severity and prognosis. Specific phosphoproteome/proteome signatures delineate RA pathotypes and may have clinical utility for stratifying patients for personalised medicine in RA.
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早期类风湿性关节炎滑膜的磷酸蛋白组图谱揭示了活跃的信号通路并区分了炎症病型
激酶是细胞内的信号介质,是维持类风湿性关节炎(RA)炎症过程的关键。Janus 激酶家族(JAKs)的口服抑制剂被广泛用于治疗类风湿性关节炎,而其他激酶家族(如磷脂酰肌醇3-激酶(PI3K))的抑制剂也在开发之中。目前大多数生物标记物平台对mRNA/蛋白质水平进行量化,但不能直接提供蛋白质是否活跃/不活跃的信息。磷蛋白组分析有可能在组织水平上测量特定酶的激活状态。我们利用无标记质谱法验证了对8例未经治疗的RA患者治疗前滑膜活检组织进行磷酸蛋白组和总蛋白质组分析的可行性,以确定滑膜组织中可能导致RA治疗失败的活跃细胞信号通路。差异表达分析和功能富集显示,淋巴型和骨髓型RA病型的磷酸蛋白组和蛋白质组特征明显不同。特定磷酸位点的丰度与炎症状态的程度有关。淋巴样病理型富含淋巴增生信号磷酸位点,包括哺乳动物雷帕霉素靶标(MTOR)信号,而髓样病理型则与丝裂原活化蛋白激酶(MAPK)和CDK介导的信号有关。这项分析还突显了以前与RA无关的新型激酶,如骨髓病型中的DNA激活的蛋白激酶催化亚基(PRKDC)。一些磷酸化位点与疾病活动性评分(DAS)-28等临床特征相关,这表明磷酸化位点分析有可能在疾病严重程度和预后的组织水平上确定新的生物标记物。特定的磷酸化蛋白质组/蛋白质组特征可划分出RA的病理类型,并可用于对RA患者进行分层,进行个性化治疗。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
8.60
自引率
2.00%
发文量
261
审稿时长
14 weeks
期刊介绍: Established in 1999, Arthritis Research and Therapy is an international, open access, peer-reviewed journal, publishing original articles in the area of musculoskeletal research and therapy as well as, reviews, commentaries and reports. A major focus of the journal is on the immunologic processes leading to inflammation, damage and repair as they relate to autoimmune rheumatic and musculoskeletal conditions, and which inform the translation of this knowledge into advances in clinical care. Original basic, translational and clinical research is considered for publication along with results of early and late phase therapeutic trials, especially as they pertain to the underpinning science that informs clinical observations in interventional studies.
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