Journal of Leukocyte Biology Myeloid cells, immune suppression, tumor immunology
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Originally published online as doi:10.1189/jlb.0805426 on December 30, 2005

Published online before print December 30, 2005
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(Journal of Leukocyte Biology. 2006;79:482-488.)
© 2006 by Society for Leukocyte Biology

Uric acid, a nucleic acid degradation product, down-regulates dsRNA-triggered arthritis

Fariba Zare*,1, Mattias Magnusson*, Tomas Bergström{dagger}, Mikael Brisslert*, Elisabet Josefsson*, Anna Karlsson* and Andrej Tarkowski*

* Departments of Rheumatology and Inflammation Research and
{dagger} Virology, University of Göteborg, Sweden

1 Correspondence: Department of Rheumatology and Inflammation Research, Guldhedsgatan 10A, S-413 46 Göteborg, Sweden. E-mail: fariba.zare{at}rheuma.gu.se

ABSTRACT

Uric acid, the naturally occurring degradation product of purine metabolism, is a danger signal, driving maturation of dendritic cells. It is well known that uric acid crystals display potent proinflammatory properties—the cause of gout—whereas the biological properties of soluble uric acid are less well documented. We have demonstrated previously that nucleic acids of endogenous and exogenous origin display proinflammatory properties. The aim of the present study was to assess the impact of soluble uric acid on in vivo inflammatory responses. Mice were administered with uric acid suspension in saline or saline alone prior to induction of neutrophil-mediated inflammation, delayed-type hypersensitivity, histamin-induced edema (measure of vasodilation capacity), as well as double-stranded (ds)RNA-triggered arthritis. Frequency and severity of arthritis were decreased significantly in mice exposed to dsRNA and simultaneously treated with uric acid as compared with saline-treated controls. Also, granulocyte-mediated inflammatory response and vasodilation capacity were reduced significantly in mice treated with uric acid as compared with their control group. The data suggest that down-regulation of inflammation was mediated by skewing the inflammatory response from the peripheral sites to the peritoneal cavity and down-regulating vasodilatatory capacity and thereby affecting leukocyte migration. In contrast, the T cell-mediated delayed-type hypersensitivity reaction was not affected significantly in mice exposed to uric acid. These findings demonstrate that uric acid displays a potent, distant anti-inflammatory effect in vivo. This property seems to be mediated by down-regulation of neutrophil influx to the site of inflammatory insult.

Key Words: inflammation • neutrophils




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