Dysbiosis Contributes to Arthritis Development via Activation of Autoreactive T Cells in the Intestine

Yuichi Maeda(Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development), Takashi Kurakawa(The University of Osaka), Eiji Umemoto(Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development), Daisuke Motooka(The University of Osaka), Yoshinaga Ito(Kyoto University), Kazuyoshi Gotoh(Okayama University), Keiji Hirota(Kyoto University), M. Matsushita(Osaka Minami Medical Center), Yoki Furuta(Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development), Masashi Narazaki(The University of Osaka), Noriko Sakaguchi(The University of Osaka), Hisako Kayama(Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development), Shota Nakamura(The University of Osaka), Tetsuya Iida(The University of Osaka), Yukihiko Saeki(Osaka Minami Medical Center), Atsushi Kumanogoh(Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development), Shimon Sakaguchi(Kyoto University), Kiyoshi Takeda(Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development)
Arthritis & Rheumatology
June 23, 2016
Cited by 692

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The intestinal microbiota is involved in the pathogenesis of arthritis. Altered microbiota composition has been demonstrated in patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA). However, it remains unclear how dysbiosis contributes to the development of arthritis. The aim of this study was to investigate whether altered composition of human intestinal microbiota in RA patients contributes to the development of arthritis. METHODS: We analyzed the fecal microbiota of patients with early RA and healthy controls, using 16S ribosomal RNA-based deep sequencing. We inoculated fecal samples from RA patients and healthy controls into germ-free arthritis-prone SKG mice and evaluated the immune responses. We also analyzed whether the lymphocytes of SKG mice harboring microbiota from RA patients react with the arthritis-related autoantigen 60S ribosomal protein L23a (RPL23A). RESULTS: A subpopulation of patients with early RA harbored intestinal microbiota dominated by Prevotella copri; SKG mice harboring microbiota from RA patients had an increased number of intestinal Th17 cells and developed severe arthritis when treated with zymosan. Lymphocytes in regional lymph nodes and the colon, but not the spleen, of these mice showed enhanced interleukin-17 (IL-17) responses to RPL23A. Naive SKG mouse T cells cocultured with P copri-stimulated dendritic cells produced IL-17 in response to RPL23A and rapidly induced arthritis. CONCLUSION: We demonstrated that dysbiosis increases sensitivity to arthritis via activation of autoreactive T cells in the intestine. Autoreactive SKG mouse T cells are activated by dysbiotic microbiota in the intestine, causing joint inflammation. Dysbiosis is an environmental factor that triggers arthritis development in genetically susceptible mice.


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