Abstract

Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a chronic autoimmune disease of unknown etiology characterized by inflammation of the peripheral synovial joints leading to pannus formation and bone destruction. Rheumatoid Factor (RF) and anti-citrullinated protein antibodies (ACPA) are present years before clinical manifestations and are indicative of a break in tolerance that precedes chronic inflammation. The majority of studies investigating disease pathogenesis focus on the synovial joint as target site of inflammation while few studies explore the initial break in peripheral tolerance which occurs within secondary lymphoid organs such as lymph nodes. If explored during the earliest phases of RA, lymph node research may provide innovative drug targets for disease modulation or prevention. RA research largely centers on the role and origin of lymphocytes, such as pro-inflammatory T cells and macrophages that infiltrate the joint, as well as growing efforts to determine the role of stromal cells within the synovium. It is therefore important to explore these cell types also within the lymph node as a number of mouse studies suggest a prominent immunomodulatory role for lymph node stromal cells. Synovium and proximal peripheral lymph nodes should be investigated in conjunction with one another to gain understanding of the immunological processes driving RA progression from systemic autoimmunity toward synovial inflammation. This perspective seeks to provide an overview of current literature concerning the immunological changes present within lymph nodes and synovium during early RA. It will also propose areas that warrant further exploration with the aim to uncover novel targets to prevent disease progression.

Highlights

  • Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a chronic inflammatory autoimmune disease of unknown etiology that preferentially affects the peripheral joints

  • Current research indicates that this chronic inflammation is driven by the infiltration of destructive pro-inflammatory lymphocytes into the joint leading to pro-inflammatory cytokine release and the initiation of an immune response

  • When studying dendritic cell (DC) subsets (CD1c+ myeloid DCs and CD304+ plasmacytoid DCs) in lymph node (LN) tissue it appeared that frequencies are comparable between individuals at risk of developing rheumatoid arthritis (RA-risk) individuals and healthy controls, but increased in RA patients [29]

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Summary

Frontiers in Medicine

The majority of studies investigating disease pathogenesis focus on the synovial joint as target site of inflammation while few studies explore the initial break in peripheral tolerance which occurs within secondary lymphoid organs such as lymph nodes. If explored during the earliest phases of RA, lymph node research may provide innovative drug targets for disease modulation or prevention. Synovium and proximal peripheral lymph nodes should be investigated in conjunction with one another to gain understanding of the immunological processes driving RA progression from systemic autoimmunity toward synovial inflammation. This perspective seeks to provide an overview of current literature concerning the immunological changes present within lymph nodes and synovium during early RA.

INTRODUCTION
INSIGHTS FROM SYNOVIUM DURING EARLY RA DEVELOPMENT
Findings
FUTURE RESEARCH AVENUES
Full Text
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