Objective: To analyze the molecular and functional characteristics of a soluble form of the granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor receptor alpha chain (sGM-CSFR alpha), and analyze transcript expression in immune cells and the cellular constituents of rheumatoid arthritis synovial tissue.
Methods: We amplified, cloned, and expressed the sGM-CSFR alpha and transmembrane form of the receptor (tmGM-CSFR alpha) from complementary DNA derived from a human myelomonocytic cell line. Competitive polymerase chain reaction assays were developed to determine the absolute and relative amounts of tmGM-CSFR alpha versus sGM-CSFR alpha message synthesized by various cell lines and tissues.
Results: sGM-CSFR alpha transcripts were detected in bone marrow, monocyte/macrophages (cultured in GM-CSF), rheumatoid synovial tissue, and rheumatoid synovial tissue T cell lines, and represented the predominant transcript in synovial fibroblasts and osteoarthritis synovial tissue. Levels of expression in monocyte/macrophages and some synovial fibroblast and T cell lines approached those seen in transfected cell lines producing functional sGM-CSFR alpha.
Conclusion: sGM-CSFR alpha represents a functional antagonist of GM-CSF activity in vitro. Expression of sGM-CSFR alpha in bone marrow, rheumatoid synovial tissue T cells, and synovial fibroblasts suggests an important role in vivo, both in regulating myelopoiesis and in modulating the immune response.