Plasma Chemokines in Patients with Alcohol Use Disorders: Association of CCL11 (Eotaxin-1) with Psychiatric Comorbidity
FRONTIERS IN PSYCHIATRY
Authors: Garcia-Marchena, Nuria; Fernando Araos, Pedro; Barrios, Vicente; Sanchez-Marin, Laura; Chowen, Julie A.; Pedraz, Maria; Castilla-Ortega, Estela; Romero-Sanchiz, Pablo; Ponce, Guillermo; Gavito, Ana L.; Decara, Juan; Silva, Daniel; Torrens, Marta; Argente, Jesus; Rubio, Gabriel; Serrano, Antonia; Rodriguez de Fonseca, Fernando; Javier Pavon, Francisco
Abstract
Recent studies have linked changes in peripheral chemokine concentrations to the presence of both addictive behaviors and psychiatric disorders. The present study further explore this link by analyzing the potential association of psychiatry comorbidity with alterations in the concentrations of circulating plasma chemokine in patients of both sexes diagnosed with alcohol use disorders (AUD). To this end, 85 abstinent subjects with AUD from an outpatient setting and 55 healthy subjects were evaluated for substance and mental disorders. Plasma samples were obtained to quantify chemokine concentrations [ C-C motif (CC), C-X-C motif (CXC), and C-X3-C motif (CX3C) chemokines]. Abstinent AUD patients displayed a high prevalence of comorbid mental disorders (72%) and other substance use disorders (45%). Plasma concentrations of chemokines CXCL12/ stromal cell-derived factor-1 (p < 0.001) and CX3CL1/fractalkine (p < 0.05) were lower in AUD patients compared to controls, whereas CCL11/eotaxin-1 concentrations were strongly decreased in female AUD patients (p < 0.001). In the alcohol group, CXCL8 concentrations were increased in patients with liver and pancreas diseases and there was a significant correlation to aspartate transaminase (r = + 0.456, p < 0.001) and gamma-glutamyltransferase (r = + 0.647, p < 0.001). Focusing on comorbid psychiatric disorders, we distinguish between patients with additional mental disorders (N = 61) and other substance use disorders (N = 38). Only CCL11 concentrations were found to be altered in AUD patients diagnosed with mental disorders (p < 0.01) with a strong main effect of sex. Thus, patients with mood disorders (N = 42) and/or anxiety (N = 16) had lower CCL11 concentrations than non-comorbid patients being more evident in women. The alcohol-induced alterations in circulating chemokines were also explored in preclinical models of alcohol use with male Wistar rats. Rats exposed to repeated ethanol (3 g/kg, gavage) had lower CXCL12 (p < 0.01) concentrations and higher CCL11 concentrations (p < 0.001) relative to vehicle-treated rats. Additionally, the increased CCL11 concentrations in rats exposed to ethanol were enhanced by the prior exposure to restraint stress (p < 0.01). Concordantly, acute ethanol exposure induced changes in CXCL12, CX3CL1, and CCL11 in the same direction to repeated exposure. These results clearly indicate a contribution of specific chemokines to the phenotype of AUD and a strong effect of sex, revealing a link of CCL11 to alcohol and anxiety/stress.
B lymphocytes directly contribute to tissue fibrosis in patients with IgG(4)-related disease
JOURNAL OF ALLERGY AND CLINICAL IMMUNOLOGY
Authors: Della-Torre, Emanuel; Rigamonti, Elena; Perugino, Cory; Baghai-Sain, Simona; Sun, Na; Kaneko, Naoki; Maehara, Takashi; Rovati, Lucrezia; Ponzoni, Maurilio; Milani, Raffaella; Lanzillotta, Marco; Mahajan, Vinay; Mattoo, Hamid; Molineris, Ivan; Deshpande, Vikram; Stone, John H.; Falconi, Massimo; Manfredi, Angelo A.; Pillai, Shiv
Abstract
Background: IgG(4)-related disease (IgG(4)-RD) is a fibroinflammatory condition marked by rapid clinical improvement after selective depletion of B lymphocytes with rituximab. This feature suggests that B cells might participate in fibrogenesis and wound healing. Objective: In the present work we aimed to demonstrate that B lymphocytes contribute directly to tissue fibrosis in patients with IgG(4)-RD. Methods: Total circulating CD19(+) B lymphocytes, naive B cells, memory B cells, or plasmablasts from patients with IgG(4)-RD were cultivated with human fibroblasts. Profibrotic soluble factors and collagen production in cocultures were assessed by using ELISAs and Luminex assays. RNA sequencing and quantitative RT-PCR were used to assess fibroblast activation in the presence of B cells, as well as induction of profibrotic pathways in B-cell subsets. Relevant profibrotic and inflammatory molecules were confirmed in vitro by using functional experiments and on IgG(4)-RD tissue sections by using multicolor immunofluorescence studies. Results: B cells from patients with IgG(4)-RD (1) produced the profibrotic molecule platelet-derived growth factor B and stimulated collagen production by fibroblasts; (2) expressed enzymes implicated in extracellular matrix remodeling, such as lysyl oxidase homolog 2; (3) produced the chemotactic factors CCL4, CCL5, and CCL11; and (4) induced production of these same chemokines by activated fibroblasts. Plasmablasts expressed sets of genes implicated in fibroblast activation and proliferation and therefore represent cells with intrinsic profibrotic properties. Conclusion: We have demonstrated that B cells contribute directly to tissue fibrosis in patients with IgG4-RD. These unanticipated profibrotic properties of B lymphocytes, particularly plasmablasts, might be relevant for fibrogenesis in patients with other fibroinflammatory disorders and for wound-healing processes in physiologic conditions.