Expression and activity of citrullinating peptidylarginine deiminase enzymes in monocytes and macrophages

2004 
Background: Antibodies directed to proteins containing the non-standard amino acid citrulline, are extremely specific for rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Peptidylcitrulline can be generated by post-translational conversion of arginine residues. This process, citrullination, is catalysed by a group of calcium dependent peptidylarginine deiminase (PAD) enzymes. Objective: To investigate the expression and activity of four isotypes of PAD in peripheral blood and synovial fluid cells of patients with RA. Results: The data presented here show that citrullination of proteins by PAD enzymes is a process regulated at three levels: transcription—in peripheral blood PAD2 and PAD4 mRNAs are expressed predominantly in monocytes; PAD4 mRNA is not detectable in macrophages, translation—translation of PAD2 mRNA is subject to differentiation stage-specific regulation by its 3' UTR, and activation—the PAD proteins are only activated when sufficient Ca2+ is available. Such high Ca2+ concentrations are normally not present in living cells. In macrophages, which are abundant in the inflamed RA synovium, vimentin is specifically citrullinated after Ca2+ influx. Conclusion: PAD2 and PAD4 are the most likely candidate PAD isotypes for the citrullination of synovial proteins in RA. Our results indicate that citrullinated vimentin is a candidate autoantigen in RA.
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