Autoreactivity to malondialdehyde-modifications in rheumatoid arthritis is linked to disease activity and synovial pathogenesis
Caroline Gronwall, Khaled Amara, Uta Hardt, Akilan Krishnamurthy,, Johanna Steen, Marianne Engstrom, Meng Sun, A. Jimmy Ytterberg, Roman A., Zubarev, Dagmar Scheel-Toellner, Jeffrey D. Greenberg, Lars Klareskog, Anca, I. Catrina, Vivianne Malmstrom, Gregg J. Silverman

TL;DR
This study explores the role of anti-MDA autoantibodies in rheumatoid arthritis, revealing their correlation with disease activity, presence in synovial tissue, and potential contribution to joint destruction.
Contribution
It is the first detailed characterization of anti-MDA autoreactivity in RA, including monoclonal antibody analysis and functional implications.
Findings
Serum IgG anti-MDA levels correlate with RA disease activity.
MDA-modified proteins are present in RA synovial tissue.
Anti-MDA antibodies can induce osteoclastogenesis.
Abstract
Oxidation-associated malondialdehyde (MDA) modification of proteins can generate immunogenic neo-epitopes that are recognized by autoantibodies. In health, IgM antibodies to MDA-adducts are part of the natural antibody pool, while elevated levels of IgG anti-MDA are associated with inflammatory conditions. Yet, in human autoimmune disease IgG anti-MDA responses have not been well characterized and their potential contribution to disease pathogenesis is not known. Here, we investigate MDA-modifications and anti-MDA-modified protein autoreactivity in rheumatoid arthritis (RA). While RA is primarily associated with autoreactivity to citrullinated antigens, we also observed increases in serum IgG anti-MDA in RA patients compared to controls. IgG anti-MDA levels significantly correlated with disease activity by DAS28-ESR and serum TNF-alpha, IL-6, and CRP. Mass spectrometry analysis of RA…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
