Browsing by Author "Wirth, Benjamin (57222749827)"
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Publication Reset of Inflammatory Priming of Joint Tissue and Reduction of the Severity of Arthritis Flares by Bromodomain Inhibition(2023) ;Friščić, Jasna (57222741562) ;Reinwald, Christiane (56461282300) ;Böttcher, Martin (7101610692) ;Houtman, Miranda (57190024291) ;Euler, Maximilien (57210164636) ;Chen, Xi (57225125287) ;Walker, Kellie I. (57222746842) ;Kirchner, Philipp (52263884000) ;Zhu, Honglin (55674183500) ;Wirth, Benjamin (57222749827) ;Weidner, Daniela (35312919800) ;Krüger, René (57222748932) ;Trajkovic, Vladimir (7004516866) ;Ekici, Arif B. (6603821550) ;Klein, Kerstin (8856971500) ;Mougiakakos, Dimitrios (25655203300) ;Ospelt, Caroline (8869988200) ;Schett, Georg (7003435673)Hoffmann, Markus H. (57199660418)Objective: We have recently shown that priming of synovial fibroblasts (SFs) drives arthritis flares. Pathogenic priming of SFs is essentially mediated by epigenetic reprogramming. Bromodomain and extraterminal motif (BET) proteins translate epigenetic changes into transcription. Here, we used a BET inhibitor (I-BET151) to target inflammatory tissue priming and to reduce flare severity in a murine experimental arthritis model. Methods: BALB/c mice were treated by intraperitoneal injection or by local injection in the paw with I-BET151, which blocks the interaction of BET proteins with acetylated histones. We assessed the effects of I-BET151 on acute arthritis and/or inflammatory tissue priming in a model of repeated injections of monosodium urate crystals or zymosan into the mouse paw. I-BET151 was given before arthritis induction, at peak inflammation, or after healing of the first arthritis bout. We performed transcriptomic (RNA-Seq), epigenomic (ATAC-Seq), and functional (invasion, cytokine production, migration, senescence, metabolic flux) analyses of murine and human SFs treated with I-BET151 in vitro or in vivo. Results: Systemic I-BET151 administration did not affect acute inflammation but abolished inflammatory tissue priming and diminished flare severity in both preventive and therapeutic treatment settings. I-BET151 was also effective when applied locally in the joint. BET inhibition also inhibited osteoclast differentiation, while macrophage activation in the joint was not affected. Flare reduction after BET inhibition was mediated, at least in part, by rolling back the primed transcriptional, metabolic, and pathogenic phenotype of SFs. Conclusion: Inflammatory tissue priming is dependent on transcriptional regulation by BET proteins, making them promising therapeutic targets for prevention of arthritis flares in previously affected joints. © 2022 The Authors. Arthritis & Rheumatology published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American College of Rheumatology. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Reset of Inflammatory Priming of Joint Tissue and Reduction of the Severity of Arthritis Flares by Bromodomain Inhibition(2023) ;Friščić, Jasna (57222741562) ;Reinwald, Christiane (56461282300) ;Böttcher, Martin (7101610692) ;Houtman, Miranda (57190024291) ;Euler, Maximilien (57210164636) ;Chen, Xi (57225125287) ;Walker, Kellie I. (57222746842) ;Kirchner, Philipp (52263884000) ;Zhu, Honglin (55674183500) ;Wirth, Benjamin (57222749827) ;Weidner, Daniela (35312919800) ;Krüger, René (57222748932) ;Trajkovic, Vladimir (7004516866) ;Ekici, Arif B. (6603821550) ;Klein, Kerstin (8856971500) ;Mougiakakos, Dimitrios (25655203300) ;Ospelt, Caroline (8869988200) ;Schett, Georg (7003435673)Hoffmann, Markus H. (57199660418)Objective: We have recently shown that priming of synovial fibroblasts (SFs) drives arthritis flares. Pathogenic priming of SFs is essentially mediated by epigenetic reprogramming. Bromodomain and extraterminal motif (BET) proteins translate epigenetic changes into transcription. Here, we used a BET inhibitor (I-BET151) to target inflammatory tissue priming and to reduce flare severity in a murine experimental arthritis model. Methods: BALB/c mice were treated by intraperitoneal injection or by local injection in the paw with I-BET151, which blocks the interaction of BET proteins with acetylated histones. We assessed the effects of I-BET151 on acute arthritis and/or inflammatory tissue priming in a model of repeated injections of monosodium urate crystals or zymosan into the mouse paw. I-BET151 was given before arthritis induction, at peak inflammation, or after healing of the first arthritis bout. We performed transcriptomic (RNA-Seq), epigenomic (ATAC-Seq), and functional (invasion, cytokine production, migration, senescence, metabolic flux) analyses of murine and human SFs treated with I-BET151 in vitro or in vivo. Results: Systemic I-BET151 administration did not affect acute inflammation but abolished inflammatory tissue priming and diminished flare severity in both preventive and therapeutic treatment settings. I-BET151 was also effective when applied locally in the joint. BET inhibition also inhibited osteoclast differentiation, while macrophage activation in the joint was not affected. Flare reduction after BET inhibition was mediated, at least in part, by rolling back the primed transcriptional, metabolic, and pathogenic phenotype of SFs. Conclusion: Inflammatory tissue priming is dependent on transcriptional regulation by BET proteins, making them promising therapeutic targets for prevention of arthritis flares in previously affected joints. © 2022 The Authors. Arthritis & Rheumatology published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American College of Rheumatology. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication The complement system drives local inflammatory tissue priming by metabolic reprogramming of synovial fibroblasts(2021) ;Friščić, Jasna (57222741562) ;Böttcher, Martin (7101610692) ;Reinwald, Christiane (56461282300) ;Bruns, Heiko (14044710500) ;Wirth, Benjamin (57222749827) ;Popp, Samantha-Josefine (57222740668) ;Walker, Kellie Irene (57222746842) ;Ackermann, Jochen A. (42961043000) ;Chen, Xi (57225125287) ;Turner, Jason (56457133300) ;Zhu, Honglin (55674183500) ;Seyler, Lisa (54894221500) ;Euler, Maximilien (57210164636) ;Kirchner, Philipp (52263884000) ;Krüger, René (57222748932) ;Ekici, Arif B. (6603821550) ;Major, Triin (57214989374) ;Aust, Oliver (57205580515) ;Weidner, Daniela (35312919800) ;Fischer, Anita (56585211500) ;Andes, Fabian T. (55889908200) ;Stanojevic, Zeljka (55976632400) ;Trajkovic, Vladimir (7004516866) ;Herrmann, Martin (7201819676) ;Korb-Pap, Adelheid (36930780600) ;Wank, Isabel (57211115464) ;Hess, Andreas (7202967911) ;Winter, Johnathan (57222744407) ;Wixler, Viktor (6603036357) ;Distler, Jörg (7005411651) ;Steiner, Günter (7201592438) ;Kiener, Hans P. (6701813524) ;Frey, Benjamin (12763042700) ;Kling, Lasse (57201072152) ;Raza, Karim (24169603700) ;Frey, Silke (43160977300) ;Kleyer, Arnd (55303941100) ;Bäuerle, Tobias (8397787400) ;Hughes, Timothy R. (57212746532) ;Grüneboom, Anika (57208032504) ;Steffen, Ulrike (54414198700) ;Krönke, Gerhard (8790097900) ;Croft, Adam P. (7006943239) ;Filer, Andrew (6603511236) ;Köhl, Jörg (7101893575) ;Klein, Kerstin (8856971500) ;Buckley, Christopher D. (7202815221) ;Schett, Georg (7003435673) ;Mougiakakos, Dimitrios (25655203300)Hoffmann, Markus H. (57199660418)Arthritis typically involves recurrence and progressive worsening at specific predilection sites, but the checkpoints between remission and persistence remain unknown. Here, we defined the molecular and cellular mechanisms of this inflammation-mediated tissue priming. Re-exposure to inflammatory stimuli caused aggravated arthritis in rodent models. Tissue priming developed locally and independently of adaptive immunity. Repeatedly stimulated primed synovial fibroblasts (SFs) exhibited enhanced metabolic activity inducing functional changes with intensified migration, invasiveness and osteoclastogenesis. Meanwhile, human SF from patients with established arthritis displayed a similar primed phenotype. Transcriptomic and epigenomic analyses as well as genetic and pharmacological targeting demonstrated that inflammatory tissue priming relies on intracellular complement C3- and C3a receptor-activation and downstream mammalian target of rapamycin- and hypoxia-inducible factor 1α-mediated metabolic SF invigoration that prevents activation-induced senescence, enhances NLRP3 inflammasome activity, and in consequence sensitizes tissue for inflammation. Our study suggests possibilities for therapeutic intervention abrogating tissue priming without immunosuppression. © 2021 Elsevier Inc. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication The complement system drives local inflammatory tissue priming by metabolic reprogramming of synovial fibroblasts(2021) ;Friščić, Jasna (57222741562) ;Böttcher, Martin (7101610692) ;Reinwald, Christiane (56461282300) ;Bruns, Heiko (14044710500) ;Wirth, Benjamin (57222749827) ;Popp, Samantha-Josefine (57222740668) ;Walker, Kellie Irene (57222746842) ;Ackermann, Jochen A. (42961043000) ;Chen, Xi (57225125287) ;Turner, Jason (56457133300) ;Zhu, Honglin (55674183500) ;Seyler, Lisa (54894221500) ;Euler, Maximilien (57210164636) ;Kirchner, Philipp (52263884000) ;Krüger, René (57222748932) ;Ekici, Arif B. (6603821550) ;Major, Triin (57214989374) ;Aust, Oliver (57205580515) ;Weidner, Daniela (35312919800) ;Fischer, Anita (56585211500) ;Andes, Fabian T. (55889908200) ;Stanojevic, Zeljka (55976632400) ;Trajkovic, Vladimir (7004516866) ;Herrmann, Martin (7201819676) ;Korb-Pap, Adelheid (36930780600) ;Wank, Isabel (57211115464) ;Hess, Andreas (7202967911) ;Winter, Johnathan (57222744407) ;Wixler, Viktor (6603036357) ;Distler, Jörg (7005411651) ;Steiner, Günter (7201592438) ;Kiener, Hans P. (6701813524) ;Frey, Benjamin (12763042700) ;Kling, Lasse (57201072152) ;Raza, Karim (24169603700) ;Frey, Silke (43160977300) ;Kleyer, Arnd (55303941100) ;Bäuerle, Tobias (8397787400) ;Hughes, Timothy R. (57212746532) ;Grüneboom, Anika (57208032504) ;Steffen, Ulrike (54414198700) ;Krönke, Gerhard (8790097900) ;Croft, Adam P. (7006943239) ;Filer, Andrew (6603511236) ;Köhl, Jörg (7101893575) ;Klein, Kerstin (8856971500) ;Buckley, Christopher D. (7202815221) ;Schett, Georg (7003435673) ;Mougiakakos, Dimitrios (25655203300)Hoffmann, Markus H. (57199660418)Arthritis typically involves recurrence and progressive worsening at specific predilection sites, but the checkpoints between remission and persistence remain unknown. Here, we defined the molecular and cellular mechanisms of this inflammation-mediated tissue priming. Re-exposure to inflammatory stimuli caused aggravated arthritis in rodent models. Tissue priming developed locally and independently of adaptive immunity. Repeatedly stimulated primed synovial fibroblasts (SFs) exhibited enhanced metabolic activity inducing functional changes with intensified migration, invasiveness and osteoclastogenesis. Meanwhile, human SF from patients with established arthritis displayed a similar primed phenotype. Transcriptomic and epigenomic analyses as well as genetic and pharmacological targeting demonstrated that inflammatory tissue priming relies on intracellular complement C3- and C3a receptor-activation and downstream mammalian target of rapamycin- and hypoxia-inducible factor 1α-mediated metabolic SF invigoration that prevents activation-induced senescence, enhances NLRP3 inflammasome activity, and in consequence sensitizes tissue for inflammation. Our study suggests possibilities for therapeutic intervention abrogating tissue priming without immunosuppression. © 2021 Elsevier Inc.
