Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2793759 Cytokine 2016 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Plasma levels of the six adpokines do not differ between SLE and normal controls.•Omentin-1 level is lower in SLE patients without nephritis.•Chemerin and cathepsin-S level are higher in SLE with nervous system disorder.

ObjectiveTo evaluate the plasma levels of six adipokines, including chemerin, omentin-1, lipocalin-2, cathepsin-S, cathepsin-L and adipsin, in patients with SLE.MethodsNinety SLE patients and ninety control subjects were recruited, plasma adipokines levels were measured by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, and their associations with major clinical and laboratory indexes were analyzed.ResultsThere were no significant differences in plasma chemerin, omentin-1, lipocalin-2, cathepsin-S, cathepsin-L and adipsin levels between SLE patients and controls. Further subgroup analyses by major clinical and laboratory indexes showed that plasma omentin-1 level was significantly lower in SLE patients without nephritis when compared with those patients with nephritis (P = 0.002). Plasma chemerin, cathepsin-S levels in SLE patients without nervous system disorder were significantly lower in comparison with SLE patients with nervous system disorder (P = 0.035, P = 0.029). No significant associations of other adipokines with any major clinical and laboratory indexes were observed.ConclusionsPlasma levels of chemerin, omentin-1, lipocalin-2, cathepsin-S, cathepsin-L and adipsin in SLE patients were not markedly different from the normal controls. The presence of nephritis was connected with higher plasma omentin-1 levels in SLE patients, and the presence of nervous system disorder was associated with higher plasma chemerin, cathepsin-S levels in SLE patients. However, functional studies are awaited to further explore the potential roles of these cytokines in SLE.

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Life Sciences Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology Endocrinology
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