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Autoantibodies are associated with disease progression in idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis.

Katerina KoetherValérie BesnardHilary SandigAlan CarruthersElena MirandaSabine Grootenboer-MignotCamille TailléSylvie ChevretDominique ValeyreHilario NunesDominique Israel-BietWei Keat LimVincent CottinDominic CorkillClaire DobsonMaria GrovesFranco FerraroEdouard GuenziLing HuangMichal SulikowskiArnaud A MailleuxLynne Anne MurrayThomas MustelinIan StricklandMatthew A SleemanBruno Crestani
Published in: The European respiratory journal (2023)
Several reports have highlighted a potential role of autoreactive B-cells and autoantibodies that correlates with increased disease severity in patients with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF). Here we show that patients with IPF have an altered B-cell phenotype and that those subjects who have autoantibodies against the intermediate filament protein periplakin (PPL) have a significantly worse outcome in terms of progression-free survival. Using a mouse model of lung fibrosis, we demonstrate that introducing antibodies targeting the endogenous protein PPL (mimicking naturally occurring autoantibodies seen in patients) directly in the lung increases lung injury, inflammation, collagen and fibronectin expression through direct activation of follicular dendritic cells, which in turn activates and drives proliferation of fibroblasts. This fibrocyte population was also observed in fibrotic foci of patients with IPF and was increased in peripheral blood of IPF patients compared to aged-matched controls. This study reiterates the complex and heterogeneous nature of IPF, identifying new pathways that may prove suitable for therapeutic intervention.
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