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Role of hypoxia and cAMP in the transdifferentiation of human fetal cardiac fibroblasts: implications for progression to scarring in autoimmune-associated congenital heart block
Clancy, Robert M; Zheng, Ping; O'Mahony, Marguerita; Izmirly, Peter; Zavadil, Jiri; Gardner, Lawrence; Buyon, Jill P
OBJECTIVE: Identification of isolated congenital heart block (CHB) predicts, with near certainty, the presence of maternal anti-SSA/Ro antibodies; however, the 2% incidence of CHB in first offspring of anti-SSA/Ro+ mothers, 20% recurrence in subsequent pregnancies, and discordance in identical twins suggest that an environmental factor amplifies the effect of the antibody. Accordingly, this study was carried out to explore the hypothesis that hypoxia potentiates a profibrosing phenotype of the fetal cardiac fibroblast. METHODS: Evidence of an effect of hypoxia was sought by immunohistologic evaluation of CHB-affected fetal heart tissue and by determination of erythropoietin levels in cord blood. The in vitro effect of hypoxia on gene expression and phenotype in fibroblasts derived from fetal hearts and lungs was investigated by Affymetrix arrays, quantitative polymerase chain reaction (PCR), immunofluorescence, and immunoblotting. RESULTS: In vivo hypoxic exposure was supported by the prominent intracellular fibroblast expression of hypoxia-inducible factor 1alpha in conduction tissue from 2 fetuses in whom CHB led to death. The possibility that hypoxia was sustained was suggested by significantly elevated erythropoietin levels in cord blood from CHB-affected, as compared with unaffected, anti-SSA/Ro-exposed neonates. In vitro exposure of cardiac fibroblasts to hypoxia resulted in transdifferentiation to myofibroblasts (a scarring phenotype), as demonstrated on immunoblots and immunofluorescence by increased expression of smooth muscle actin (SMA), an effect not seen in lung fibroblasts. Hypoxia-exposed cardiac fibroblasts expressed adrenomedullin at 4-fold increased levels, as determined by Affymetrix array, quantitative PCR, and immunofluorescence, thus focusing attention on cAMP as a modulator of fibrosis. MDL12,330A, an adenylate cyclase inhibitor that lowers the levels of cAMP, increased expression of fibrosis-related proteins (mammalian target of rapamycin, SMA, plasminogen activator inhibitor type 1, and type I collagen), while the cAMP activator forskolin attenuated transforming growth factor beta-elicited fibrosing end points in the cardiac fibroblasts. CONCLUSION: These findings provide evidence that hypoxia may amplify the injurious effects of anti-SSA/Ro antibodies. Modulation of cAMP may be a key component in the scarring phenotype. Further assessment of the susceptibility of cardiac fibroblasts to cAMP modulation offers a new research direction in CHB
PMID: 18050204
ISSN: 0004-3591
CID: 75771
Different temporal expression of immunodominant Ro60/60 kDa-SSA and La/SSB apotopes
Reed, J H; Neufing, P J; Jackson, M W; Clancy, R M; Macardle, P J; Buyon, J P; Gordon, T P
Opsonization of apoptotic cardiocytes by maternal anti-Ro/SSA and anti-La/SSB antibodies contributes to tissue injury in the neonatal lupus syndrome. The objective of the current study was to quantify the surface membrane expression of Ro/La components during different phases of apoptosis and map the Ro/La apotopes (epitopes expressed on apoptotic cells) bound by cognate antibodies. Multi-parameter flow cytometry was used to define early and late apoptotic populations and their respective binding by monospecific anti-Ro and anti-La IgGs. Anti-Ro60 bound specifically to early apoptotic Jurkat cells and remained accessible on the cell surface throughout early and late apoptosis. In contrast, anti-La bound exclusively to late apoptotic cells in experiments controlled for non-specific membrane leakage of IgG. Ro52 was not accessible for antibody binding on either apoptotic population. The immunodominant NH2-terminal and RNA recognition motif (RRM) epitopes of La were expressed as apotopes on late apoptotic cells, confirming recent in vivo findings. An immunodominant internal epitope of Ro60 that contains the RRM, and is recognized by a majority of sera from mothers of children with congenital heart block (CHB) and patients with primary Sjogren's syndrome, was also accessible as an apotope on early apoptotic cells. The distinct temporal expression of the immunodominant Ro60 and La apotopes indicates that these intracellular autoantigens translocate independently to the cell surface, and supports a model in which maternal antibody populations against both Ro60 and La apotopes act in an additive fashion to increase the risk of tissue damage in CHB
PMCID:1868853
PMID: 17286801
ISSN: 0009-9104
CID: 73543
Neonatal lupus
Chapter by: Buyon, Jill P; Clancy, Robert M
in: Dubois' Lupus Erythematosus by Wallace DJ; Hahn B; Dubois EL [Eds]
Philadelphia : Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, 2007
pp. ?-?
ISBN: 0781793947
CID: 4872
Antibodies to SSA/Ro and SSB/La : potential mechanisms of tissue injury in neonatal lupus-congential heart block
Chapter by: Buyon, JP; Clancy, RM
in: Systemic lupus erythematosus by Tsokos, George C; Gordon, Caroline; Smolen, Josef S. [Eds]
Philadelphia : Mosby Elsevier, c2007
pp. 248-257
ISBN: 0323044344
CID: 603082
Impaired clearance of apoptotic cardiocytes is linked to anti-SSA/Ro and -SSB/La antibodies in the pathogenesis of congenital heart block
Clancy, Robert M; Neufing, Petra J; Zheng, Ping; O'Mahony, Marguerita; Nimmerjahn, Falk; Gordon, Tom P; Buyon, Jill P
The role of cardiocytes in physiologic removal of apoptotic cells and the subsequent effect of surface binding by anti-SSA/Ro and -SSB/La antibodies was addressed. Initial experiments evaluated induction of apoptosis by extrinsic and intrinsic pathways. Nuclear injury and the translocation of SSA/Ro and SSB/La antigens to the fetal cardiocyte plasma membrane were common downstream events of Fas and TNF receptor ligation, requiring caspase activation. As assessed by phase-contrast and confirmed by confocal microscopy, coculturing of healthy cardiocytes with cardiocytes rendered apoptotic via extrinsic pathways revealed a clearance mechanism that to our knowledge has not yet been described. Cultured fetal cardiocytes expressed phosphatidylserine receptors (PSRs), as did cardiac tissue from a fetus with congenital heart block (CHB) and an age-matched control. Phagocytic uptake was blocked by anti-PSR antibodies and was significantly inhibited following preincubation of apoptotic cardiocytes with chicken and murine anti-SSA/Ro and -SSB/La antibodies, with IgG from an anti-SSA/Ro- and -SSB/La-positive mother of a CHB child, but not with anti-HLA class I antibody. In a murine model, anti-Ro60 bound and inhibited uptake of apoptotic cardiocytes from wild-type but not Ro60-knockout mice. Results suggest that resident cardiocytes participate in physiologic clearance of apoptotic cardiocytes but that clearance is inhibited by opsonization via maternal autoantibodies, resulting in accumulation of apoptotic cells, promoting inflammation and subsequent scarring
PMCID:1533875
PMID: 16906225
ISSN: 0021-9738
CID: 67279
Antibody cross-reactivity of ScFv fragments that specifically recognize human apoptotic fetal cardiocytes and recombinant human Ro60 [Meeting Abstract]
Llanos, C; Buyon, JP; Bennett, S; Lavner, L; Clancy, RM
ISI:000240877200080
ISSN: 0004-3591
CID: 70101
TGF beta, a strong fetal genetic candidate, in the development of congenital heart block (CHB) [Meeting Abstract]
Izmirly, PM; Harris, RR; Merrill, JT; Harley, JB; Backer, C; Clancy, RM; Buyon, JP
ISI:000240877203011
ISSN: 0004-3591
CID: 70124
Impaired clearance of apoptotic cardiocytes and the pathogenesis of congenital heart block (CHB): Link to Anti-SSA/Ro-SSB/La antibodies [Meeting Abstract]
Clancy, RM; Neufing, PJ; O'Mahony, M; Zheng, P; Llanos, C; Gordon, TP; Buyon, JP
ISI:000240877203046
ISSN: 0004-3591
CID: 70126
Contribution of vasculopathy to lupus nephritis: Endothelial protein C receptor levels and genotype [Meeting Abstract]
Rivera, TL; Izmirly, PM; Buyon, JP; Clancy, RM
ISI:000240877204382
ISSN: 0004-3591
CID: 70137
Anti-La/SSB antiidiotypic antibodies in maternal serum: a marker of low risk for neonatal lupus in an offspring
Stea, Eleni A; Routsias, John G; Clancy, Robert M; Buyon, Jill P; Moutsopoulos, Haralampos M; Tzioufas, Athanasios G
OBJECTIVE: The anti-La/SSB response to major B cell epitopes of La/SSB can be blocked by an active idiotypic/antiidiotypic network, which can be identified using synthetic complementary epitopes deduced from the sequence of the major B cell epitopes of the molecule. This study evaluated the role of this network in pregnant women with anti-Ro/SSA and/or anti-La/SSB antibodies in the development of neonatal lupus syndrome (NLS). METHODS. Sixty-three serum samples collected from anti-Ro/anti-La-positive women during pregnancy or within 6 months after delivery were obtained from the Research Registry for Neonatal Lupus and the PR Interval Dexamethasone Evaluation study. These samples, as well as 30 sera from healthy individuals, were tested in a blinded manner by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay against synthetic peptides corresponding to major B cell epitopes and complementary epitopes of La/SSB. RESULTS. Sera from mothers giving birth to a healthy child and having no history of a child with NLS exhibited higher antiidiotypic antibody activity compared with mothers carrying a child with NLS (P < 0.0001) or mothers giving birth to a healthy child but who previously gave birth to a child with NLS (P = 0.0151). Sera from mothers of healthy children, which exhibited no apparent epitope activity against amino acids 349-364, revealed a significantly greater frequency of hidden anti-349-364aa epitope responses, blocked by antiidiotypic antibodies, as compared with sera from women pregnant with an affected child (P = 0.0094). CONCLUSION: The presence of antiidiotypic antibodies to autoantibodies against La/SSB may protect the fetus by blocking pathogenic maternal autoantibodies. Testing for these antiidiotypic responses may be useful in predicting a decreased risk of NLS
PMID: 16802359
ISSN: 0004-3591
CID: 67280