The role of CCR1 and therapeutic effects of anti‐CCL3 antibody in herpes simplex virus‐induced Behçet's disease mouse model

2019 
: Behcet's disease (BD) is a chronic systemic inflammatory disease with unclear etiopathogenesis. Although gene variants of CC chemokine receptor type 1 (CCR1) have been reported, the protein expression of CCR1 in patients with BD remains unclear. The objective of this study was to analyze the frequencies of CCR1+ cells in a herpes simplex virus-induced mouse model of BD. The frequencies of CCR1+ cells on the surface and in the cytoplasm of peripheral blood mononuclear cells and lymph nodes were analyzed by flow cytometry. The CCR1+ cells were significantly down-regulated in BD mice compared with the normal control and symptom-free control mice. Colchicine and pentoxifylline treatment improved the symptoms of BD and increased the frequencies of CCR1+ cells in BD mice. Treatment with chemokine CC motif ligand 3 (CCL3), a ligand of CCR1, caused BD symptoms to deteriorate in 10 of 16 BD mice (62·5%) via down-regulation of CCR1+ cells. Anti-CCL3 antibody treatment ameliorated BD symptoms in 10 of 20 mice (50%) and significantly decreased the disease severity score compared with CCL3-treated BD mice (P = 0·01) via up-regulation of CCR1+ cell frequencies. In patients with BD, plasma levels of CCL3 in an active state were significantly higher than in healthy control individuals (P = 0·02). These results show that the up-regulation of CCR1+ cells was related to the control of systemic inflammation of BD in mouse models.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    60
    References
    0
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []