Autophagy occurs in lymphocytes infiltrating Sjögren's syndrome minor salivary glands and correlates with histological severity of salivary gland lesions.
Author
Colafrancesco, SerenaVomero, Marta
Iannizzotto, Valentina
Minniti, Antonina
Barbati, Cristiana
Arienzo, Francesca
Mastromanno, Linda
Colasanti, Tania
Izzo, Raffaella
Nayar, Saba
Pipi, Elena
Cerbelli, Bruna
Giordano, Carla
Ciccia, Francesco
Conti, Fabrizio
Valesini, Guido
Barone, Francesca
Priori, Roberta
Alessandri, Cristiano
Publication date
2020-10-13Subject
Rheumatology
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Backgrounds: The organization of minor salivary glands (MSG) infiltrates, in patients with Sjögren's syndrome (SS), associates with disease severity and progression. Aberrant regulation of lymphocyte autophagy is involved in autoimmunity, and in previous work, we provided the first evidence of upregulated autophagy in CD4+ T cells infiltrating SS MSG. The aim of this study was to further explore autophagy in SS infiltrating and circulating lymphocytes and to investigate its role in disease histopathological progression. Methods: After collection of 20 SS MSG, the presence of lymphocyte aggregates (foci) and the formation of germinal center (GC)-like structures were observed by H&E and confirmed by immunohistochemistry. The expression of autophagy-related genes, Atg5 and MAP1LC3A, was detected by RT-PCR on microdissected salivary gland tissue and control tonsils. In MSG and tonsils, autophagic lymphocytes were identified by the detection of the autophagosome protein LC3B visualized as LC3 puncta staining by immunofluorescence. Peripheral blood autophagy was assessed by flow cytometry in SS and healthy controls (HC). Results: Real-time PCR demonstrated higher expression in the autophagy genes Atg5 and MAP1LC3A in MSG GCs as compared to both small foci (p = 0.0075, p = 0.0002) and GCs from tonsils (p = 0.0001, p = 0.0037). In MSG, LC3 puncta staining was detectable on both CD3+ and CD20+ lymphocytes; in tonsils, LC3 puncta was almost undetectable on all lymphocytes. Compared to HC (n = 20), flow cytometry did not reveal any increase of autophagy in SS circulating lymphocytes (n = 30). Conclusions: In SS MSG, lymphocytes' autophagy is a feature of infiltrating T and B cells and is associated with histological severity. Interestingly, in MSG aberrant regulation of autophagy is detectable in GC-like structures possibly indicating its involvement in the development and persistence of the autoimmune process within the lesions.Citation
Colafrancesco S, Vomero M, Iannizzotto V, Minniti A, Barbati C, Arienzo F, Mastromanno L, Colasanti T, Izzo R, Nayar S, Pipi E, Cerbelli B, Giordano C, Ciccia F, Conti F, Valesini G, Barone F, Priori R, Alessandri C. Autophagy occurs in lymphocytes infiltrating Sjögren's syndrome minor salivary glands and correlates with histological severity of salivary gland lesions. Arthritis Res Ther. 2020 Oct 13;22(1):238. doi: 10.1186/s13075-020-02317-6Type
ArticleOther
Additional Links
https://arthritis-research.biomedcentral.com/PMID
33050949Journal
Arthritis Research & TherapyPublisher
BioMed Centralae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1186/s13075-020-02317-6