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Anti-citrullinated protein antibodies contribute to platelet activation in rheumatoid arthritis
Authors:Kim LL Habets  Leendert A Trouw  EW Nivine Levarht  Suzanne JA Korporaal  Petra AM Habets  Philip de Groot  Tom WJ Huizinga  René EM Toes
Institution:Department of Rheumatology, Leiden University Medical Centre, C1-R, PO Box 9600, 2300 RC Leiden, the Netherlands ;Department of Clinical Chemistry and Haematology, University Medical Centre, Utrecht, the Netherlands ;Division of Biopharmaceutics, Leiden Amsterdam Centre for Drug Research, University of Leiden, Leiden, the Netherlands ;Knowledge Centre Forensic Psychiatric Care, Rekem Psychiatric Hospital, Rekem, Belgium
Abstract:IntroductionAlthough the role of platelets in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is relatively unexplored, recent studies point towards a contribution of platelets in arthritis. We set out to determine platelet phenotype in RA and studied whether this could be influenced by the presence of anti-citrullinated protein antibodies (ACPA).MethodsPlatelets from healthy controls were incubated in the presence of plasma of patients with RA or age- and sex-matched healthy controls and plasma from ACPAneg or ACPApos patients or in the presence of plate-bound ACPA. Characteristics of platelets isolated from patients with RA were correlated to disease activity.ResultsPlatelets isolated from healthy controls displayed markers of platelet activation in the presence of plasma derived from RA patients, as determined by P-selectin expression, formation of aggregates and secretion of soluble CD40 ligand (sCD40L). Furthermore, levels of P-selectin expression and sCD40L release correlated with high ACPA titres. In accordance with these findings, enhanced platelet activation was observed after incubation with ACPApos plasma versus ACPAneg plasma. Pre-incubation of platelets with blocking antibodies directed against low-affinity immunoglobulin G receptor (FcγRIIa) completely inhibited the ACPA-mediated activation. In addition, expression of P-selectin measured as number of platelets correlated with Disease Activity Score in 44 joints, C-reactive protein level, ACPA status and ACPA level.ConclusionsWe show for the first time that ACPA can mediate an FcγRIIa-dependent activation of platelets. As ACPA can be detected several years before RA disease onset and activated platelets contribute to vascular permeability, these data implicate a possible role for ACPA-mediated activation of platelets in arthritis onset.

Electronic supplementary material

The online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s13075-015-0665-7) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
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