医学
发病机制
滑膜关节
炎症
疾病
细胞外基质
类风湿性关节炎
软骨
滑膜
关节炎
免疫学
病理
关节软骨
骨关节炎
细胞生物学
生物
解剖
替代医学
作者
Christopher D. Buckley,Caroline Ospelt,Steffen Gay,Kim S. Midwood
标识
DOI:10.1038/s41584-020-00570-2
摘要
Current treatments for rheumatoid arthritis (RA) do not work well for a large proportion of patients, or at all in some individuals, and cannot cure or prevent this disease. One major obstacle to developing better drugs is a lack of complete understanding of how inflammatory joint disease arises and progresses. Emerging evidence indicates an important role for the tissue microenvironment in the pathogenesis of RA. Each tissue is made up of cells surrounded and supported by a unique extracellular matrix (ECM). These complex molecular networks define tissue architecture and provide environmental signals that programme site-specific cell behaviour. In the synovium, a main site of disease activity in RA, positional and disease stage-specific cellular diversity exist. Improved understanding of the architecture of the synovium from gross anatomy to the single-cell level, in parallel with evidence demonstrating how the synovial ECM is vital for synovial homeostasis and how dysregulated signals from the ECM promote chronic inflammation and tissue destruction in the RA joint, has opened up new ways of thinking about the pathogenesis of RA. These new ideas provide novel therapeutic approaches for patients with difficult-to-treat disease and could also be used in disease prevention. Tissues are composed of cells and an extracellular matrix. In this Review, the authors discuss how a greater understanding of the role of the synovial extracellular matrix in rheumatoid arthritis could lead to improved disease diagnosis and new therapies.
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