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ARL15 promotes inflammatory fibroblast activation and disease severity in rheumatoid arthritis: integrated transcriptomic and collagen-induced arthritis model analyses

Kashyap, S.; Pandey, A. k.; Saini, M.; Vijaya, K.; Kunnoth, S.; Mahajan, P.; Kundu, S.; Kumar, U.; Thelma, B.

2026-07-01 immunology
10.64898/2026.06.26.733622 bioRxiv
Show abstract

BackgroundADP-ribosylation factor-like protein 15 (ARL15) is a rheumatoid arthritis (RA) susceptibility gene identified through GWAS. Previous studies suggested a role for ARL15 in synovial fibroblast (SF) pathogenicity, but its contribution to inflammatory arthritis remains unclear. We investigated the inflammatory role of ARL15 and its therapeutic potential in RA. MethodsARL15 was overexpressed in MH7A cells followed by bulk RNA sequencing and pathway enrichment analyses. Therapeutic relevance was evaluated in collagen-induced arthritis (CIA) mouse model using anti-ARL15 monoclonal antibodies, ARL15-targeting siRNA, or isoquinoline. Arthritis scores, histopathology, micro-CT and serum cytokines were assessed. Publicly available single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) datasets were analyzed to determine ARL15 expression in RASF subsets. ResultsARL15 overexpression induced a pro-inflammatory transcriptional program characterized by upregulation of IL1A, IL1B, IL6, IL8, CXCL1, CXCL10, and CCL20. Gene set enrichment analysis revealed activation of IL6-JAK-STAT, TNF, interferon-response, and KRAS signaling pathways, with suppression of oxidative phosphorylation, lipid metabolism, and mTORC1 signaling. In CIA mice, ARL15 inhibition significantly reduced arthritis severity, inflammatory infiltrates, and joint destruction while preserving cartilage and bone integrity. Serum TNF-, IL-6, and IL-1{beta} levels were markedly decreased following ARL15 blockade. Combination monoclonal antibody treatment demonstrated the greatest therapeutic benefit. scRNA-seq analysis showed broad ARL15 expression across RA fibroblast populations, with enrichment in inflammatory lining and SF subsets. ConclusionsARL15 is a pro-inflammatory regulator of SF activation and arthritis progression. Integrated transcriptomic, single-cell, and in vivo analyses identify ARL15 as a therapeutic target for RA and support further translational development of ARL15 based therapies.

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