Abstract
Familial Mediterranean fever (FMF) is caused by mutations within the Mediterranean fever (MEFV) gene. Disease severity depends on genotype and gene dose with most serious clinical courses observed in patients with M694V homozygosity. Neutrophils are thought to play an important role in the initiation and perpetuation of inflammatory processes in FMF, but little is known about the specific characteristics of these cells in FMF patients. To further characterize neutrophilic inflammatory responses in FMF and to delineate gene–dose effects on a cellular level, we analyzed cytokine production and activation levels of isolated neutrophils derived from patients and subjects with distinct MEFV genotypes, as well as healthy and disease controls. Serum levels of interleukin-18 (IL-18) (median 11,485 pg/ml), S100A12 (median 9,726 ng/ml), and caspase-1 (median 394 pg/ml) were significantly increased in patients with homozygous M694V mutations. Spontaneous release of S100A12, caspase-1, proteinase 3, and myeloperoxidase (MPO) was restricted to ex vivo cultured neutrophils derived from patients with two pathogenic MEFV mutations. IL-18 secretion was highest in patients with two mutations but also increased in neutrophils from healthy heterozygous MEFV mutation carriers, exhibiting an ex vivo gene–dose effect, which was formerly described by us in patients' serum. CD62L (l-selectin) was spontaneously shed from the surface of ex vivo cultured neutrophils [median of geometric mean fluorescence intensity (gMFI) after 5 h: 28.8% of the initial level]. While neutrophils derived from healthy heterozygous mutation carriers again showed a gene–dose effect (median gMFI: 67.1%), healthy and disease controls had significant lower shedding rates (median gMFI: 83.6 and 82.9%, respectively). Co-culture with colchicine and/or stimulation with adenosine triphosphate (ATP) and lipopolysaccharide (LPS) led to a significant increase in receptor shedding. Neutrophils were not prevented from spontaneous shedding by blocking IL-1 or the NLRP3 inflammasome. In summary, the data demonstrate that ex vivo cultured neutrophils derived from FMF patients display a unique phenotype with spontaneous release of high amounts of IL-18, S100A12, MPO, caspase-1, and proteinase 3 and spontaneous activation as demonstrated by the loss of CD62L. Neutrophilic activation seems to be independent from IL-1 activation and displays a gene–dose effect that may be responsible for genotype-dependent phenotypes.
Highlights
The prototypic autoinflammatory disease familial Mediterranean fever (FMF) is caused by pyrin-encoding MEFV (Mediterranean fever) gene mutations [1, 2]
We addressed the following objectives: (i) the spontaneous marker release and change of surface marker expression are restricted to neutrophils derived from patients with FMF, (ii) the amount of spontaneous neutrophilic activation depends on a gene–dose effect, and (iii) the spontaneous release of inflammatory markers is restricted to a specific set of proteins
Most of the FMF patients investigated in this cohort were well-controlled by continuous colchicine therapy (Table S1), homozygous M694V mutation carriers showed a significant increase of C-reactive protein (CRP) [median 82.1 mg/L, p < 0.05] compared to patients with other mutations or healthy controls (HCs) (Table 1, Table S1)
Summary
The prototypic autoinflammatory disease familial Mediterranean fever (FMF) is caused by pyrin-encoding MEFV (Mediterranean fever) gene mutations [1, 2]. The activation state of neutrophils was determined by measuring the density of surface molecules With these analyses, we addressed the following objectives: (i) the spontaneous marker release and change of surface marker expression are restricted to neutrophils derived from patients with FMF, (ii) the amount of spontaneous neutrophilic activation depends on a gene–dose effect, and (iii) the spontaneous release of inflammatory markers is restricted to a specific set of proteins. We addressed the following objectives: (i) the spontaneous marker release and change of surface marker expression are restricted to neutrophils derived from patients with FMF, (ii) the amount of spontaneous neutrophilic activation depends on a gene–dose effect, and (iii) the spontaneous release of inflammatory markers is restricted to a specific set of proteins For these reasons, we included the analysis of neutrophils derived from patients with other chronic active inflammatory disorders, for example, Crohn’s disease, rheumatic diseases, cystic fibrosis, autoinflammatory diseases, and immunodeficiencies with chronic inflammation, as well as acute infections. Patients who received >5 mg/day prednisolone equivalent were excluded
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