Neutrophils from patients with SAPHO syndrome show no signs of aberrant NADPH oxidasedependent production of intracellular reactive oxygen species

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Abstract

Objective. We aimed to investigate if aberrant intracellular production of NADPH oxidase-derived reactive oxygen species (ROS) in neutrophils is a disease mechanism in the autoinflammatory disease SAPHO syndrome, characterized by synovitis, acne, pustulosis, hyperostosis and osteitis, as has previously been suggested based on a family with SAPHO syndrome-like disease. Methods. Neutrophil function was explored in a cohort of four patients with SAPHO syndrome, two of whom were sampled during both inflammatory and non-inflammatory phase. Intracellular neutrophil ROS production was determined by luminol-amplified chemiluminescence in response to phorbol myristate acetate. Results. Cells from all patients produced normal amounts of ROS, both intra- and extracellularly, when compared with internal controls as well as with a large collection of healthy controls assayed in the laboratory over time (showing an extensive inter-personal variability in a normal population). Further, intracellular production of ROS increased during the inflammatory phase. Neutrophil activation markers were comparable between patients and controls. Conclusion. Dysfunctional generation of intracellular ROS in neutrophils is not a generalizable feature in SAPHO syndrome. Secondly, serum amyloid A appears to be a more sensitive inflammatory marker than CRP during improvement and relapses in SAPHO syndrome.

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Wekell, P., Björnsdottir, H., Björkman, L., Sundqvist, M., Christenson, K., Osla, V., … Karlsson, A. (2016). Neutrophils from patients with SAPHO syndrome show no signs of aberrant NADPH oxidasedependent production of intracellular reactive oxygen species. Rheumatology (United Kingdom), 55(8), 1489–1498. https://doi.org/10.1093/rheumatology/kew192

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