Amplification of inflammation by lubricin deficiency implicated in incident, erosive gout independent of hyperuricemia.
Khaled A ElsaidTony Raymond MerrimanLeigh-Ana RossittoRu Liu-BryanJacob KarshAmanda Phipps-GreenGregory D JaySandy ElsayedMarwa QadriMarin MinerMurray CadzowTalia J DambruosoTannin SchmidtNicola DalbethAshika ChhanaJennifer HöglundMajid GhassemianAnaamika CampeauNancy MaltezNiclas G KarlssonDavid J GonzalezRobert TerkeltaubPublished in: Arthritis & rheumatology (Hoboken, N.J.) (2022)
We linked normouricemic erosive gout to attenuated lubricin, with impaired control of Cathepsin G activity, compounded by deleterious NLRP3 variants. Lubricin suppressed monosodium urate crystallization, and blunted IL-1β-induced increases in macrophage xanthine oxidase and urate. Collective activities of articular lubricin that could limit incident and erosive gouty arthritis independently of hyperuricemia are subject to disruption by inflammation, activated Cathepsin G, and synovial fibroblast TLR2 signaling. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.