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Dive into the research topics where Mohammed Mullazehi is active.

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Featured researches published by Mohammed Mullazehi.


Arthritis & Rheumatism | 2008

Antibodies against citrullinated vimentin in rheumatoid arthritis: Higher sensitivity and extended prognostic value concerning future radiographic progression as compared with antibodies against cyclic citrullinated peptides

Linda Mathsson; Mohammed Mullazehi; Marius C. Wick; Olof Sjöberg; Ronald F. van Vollenhoven; Lars Klareskog; Johan Rönnelid

OBJECTIVE The Sa autoantigen can be found in inflamed synovium of patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA), and at least part of the humoral RA-specific anti-Sa response is directed against citrullinated vimentin. This study was undertaken to evaluate the sensitivity, specificity, and prognostic value of determination of levels of antibodies against modified citrullinated vimentin (anti-MCV) as compared with antibodies against cyclic citrullinated peptides (anti-CCP) in an inception cohort of patients with early RA. METHODS Clinical data, radiographs, and measurements of levels of anti-MCV and anti-CCP antibodies were obtained in 273 patients with early RA at baseline, after 3 months, and after 1, 2, 3, and 5 years. Autoantibodies were also analyzed in 100 healthy controls. RESULTS Of the 273 patients, 193 (70.7%) were anti-MCV positive and 158 (57.9%) were anti-CCP positive at the time of diagnosis, with nearly equal specificities (95% and 96%, respectively). Forty (14.7%) were anti-MCV positive only, and 5 (1.8%) were anti-CCP positive only. Anti-MCV-positive and anti-MCV-negative patients had similar disease activity at baseline, but presence of anti-MCV was predictive of subsequent high disease activity and continued radiographic progression. Changes in anti-MCV level showed stronger correlation with changes in clinical parameters than did changes in anti-CCP level. The subgroup of patients who were anti-MCV positive and anti-CCP negative showed a higher rate of radiographic destruction than did patients who were negative for both anti-MCV and anti-CCP. CONCLUSION These findings show that when patients with early RA are compared with healthy controls, analysis of anti-MCV yields greater sensitivity and unchanged specificity as compared with analysis of anti-CCP. Anti-MCV also appears to perform better than anti-CCP in identifying poor radiographic prognosis in patients with early RA.


Arthritis Research & Therapy | 2011

Antibodies of IgG, IgA and IgM isotypes against cyclic citrullinated peptide precede the development of rheumatoid arthritis.

Heidi Kokkonen; Mohammed Mullazehi; Ewa Berglin; Göran Hallmans; Göran Wadell; Johan Rönnelid; Solbritt Rantapää-Dahlqvist

IntroductionWe and others have previously shown that antibodies against cyclic citrullinated proteins (anti-CCP) precede the development of rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and in a more recent study we reported that individuals who subsequently developed RA had increased concentrations of several cytokines and chemokines years before the onset of symptoms of joint disease. Here we aimed to evaluate the prevalence and predictive values of anti-CCP antibodies of IgG, IgM and IgA isotype in individuals who subsequently developed RA and also to relate these to cytokines and chemokines, smoking, genetic factors and radiographic score.MethodsA case-control study (1:4 ratio) was nested within the Medical Biobank and the Maternity cohorts of Northern Sweden. Patients with RA were identified from blood donors predating the onset of disease by years. Matched controls were selected randomly from the same registers. IgG, IgA and IgM anti-CCP2 antibodies were determined using EliA anti-CCP assay on ImmunoCAP 250 (Phadia AB, Uppsala, Sweden).ResultsOf 86 patients with RA identified as blood donors prior to the onset of symptoms, samples were available from 71 for analyses. The median (Q1 to Q3) predating time was 2.5 years (1.1 to 5.9 years). The sensitivity of anti-CCP antibodies in the pre-patient samples was 35.2% for IgG, 23.9% for IgA, and 11.8% for IgM. The presence of IgG and IgA anti-CCP antibodies was highly significant compared with controls. IgG and IgA anti-CCP2 predicted RA significantly in conditional logistic regression models odds ratio (OR) = 94.1, 95% confidence interval (CI) 12.7 to 695.4 and OR = 11.1, 95% CI 4.4 to 28.1, respectively, the IgM anti-CCP showed borderline significance OR = 2.5 95% CI 0.9 to 6.3. Concentrations of all anti-CCP isotypes increased the closer to the onset of symptoms the samples were collected with an earlier and higher increase for IgG and IgA compared with IgM anti-CCP. IgA and IgG anti-CCP positive individuals had different patterns of up-regulated chemokines and also, smoking brought forward the appearance of IgA anti-CCP antibodies in pre-RA individuals.ConclusionsAnti-CCP2 antibodies of both the IgG and IgA isotypes pre-dated the onset of RA by years; also, both IgG and IgA anti-CCP2 antibodies predicted the development of RA, with the highest predictive value for IgG anti-CCP2 antibodies.


Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases | 2006

High anti-collagen type-II antibody levels and induction of proinflammatory cytokines by anti-collagen antibody-containing immune complexes in vitro characterise a distinct rheumatoid arthritis phenotype associated with acute inflammation at the time of disease onset

Mohammed Mullazehi; Linda Mathsson; Jon Lampa; Johan Rönnelid

Objective: To investigate whether the cytokine-inducing properties of surface-bound collagen type II (CII)-containing immune complexes (IC), which were reported earlier, have any clinical impact. Methods: Anti-CII serology was analysed in 274 patients with early rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Patients with increased levels of anti-CII were followed serially for 1–5 years with regard to anti-CII IC-induced levels of tumour necrosis factor (TNF)α, interleukin (IL)1β and IL8. Levels of antibodies and IC-induced cytokines were compared with clinical indices over 5 years of follow-up. Results: 5/100 healthy controls and 24/274 (8.8%) patients with RA exhibited increased levels (>29 arbitrary units (AU)/ml) of anti-native CII antibodies, a non-significant difference. 9/274 (3.3%) patients with RA and no controls comprised a discrete group with high anti-CII levels >450 AU/ml. These high anti-CII level sera were associated with induction of pro-inflammatory cytokines by anti-CII-containing IC formed in vitro. 8/9 patients with high baseline anti-CII levels exhibited a parallel decline in antibody levels, IC-induced cytokines, C reactive protein (CRP) and erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR). Anti-CII-positive patients had significantly increased levels of CRP and ESR at baseline, but not later during the follow-up. Conclusions: Anti-native CII-positive patients with RA have a distinct clinical phenotype characterised by an early acute phase response that might be driven by anti-CII-containing IC in joint cartilage.


Arthritis Research & Therapy | 2012

Anti-type II collagen antibodies are associated with early radiographic destruction in rheumatoid arthritis

Mohammed Mullazehi; Marius C. Wick; Lars Klareskog; Ronald F. van Vollenhoven; Johan Rönnelid

IntroductionWe have previously reported that high levels of antibodies specific for native human type II collagen (anti-CII) at the time of RA diagnosis were associated with concurrent but not later signs of inflammation. This was associated with CII/anti-CII immune complex (IC)-induced production of pro-inflammatory cytokines in vitro. In contrast, anti-cyclic citrullinated peptide antibodies (anti-CCP) were associated both with late inflammation and late radiological destruction in the same RA cohort. We therefore hypothesized that anti-CII are also associated with early erosions.MethodsTwo-hundred-and-fifty-six patients from an early RA cohort were included. Baseline levels of anti-CII, anti-CCP and anti-mutated citrullinated vimentin were analyzed with ELISA, and rheumatoid factor levels were determined by nephelometry. Radiographs of hands and feet at baseline, after one and after two years were quantified using the 32-joints Larsen erosion score.ResultsLevels of anti-CII were bimodally distributed in the RA cohort, with a small (3.1%, 8/256) group of very high outliers with a median level 87 times higher than the median for the healthy control group. Using a cut-off discriminating the outlier group that was associated with anti-CII IC-induced production of proinflammatory cytokines in vitro, baseline anti-CII antibodies were significantly (p = 0.0486) associated with increased radiographic damage at the time of diagnosis. Anti-CII-positive patient had also significantly increased HAQ score (p = 0.0303), CRP (p = 0.0026) and ESR (p = 0.0396) at the time of diagnosis but not during follow-up. The median age among anti-CII-positive subjects was 12 years higher than among the anti-CII-negative patients.ConclusionIn contrary to anti-CCP, anti-CII-positive patients with RA have increased joint destruction and HAQ score at baseline. Anti-CII thus characterizes an early inflammatory/destructive phenotype, in contrast to the late appearance of an inflammatory/destructive phenotype in anti-CCP positive RA patients. The anti-CII phenotype might account for part of the elderly acute onset RA phenotype with rather good prognosis.


Arthritis Research & Therapy | 2015

Anti-type II collagen immune complex-induced granulocyte reactivity is associated with joint erosions in RA patients with anti-collagen antibodies

Vivek Anand Manivel; Azita Sohrabian; Marius C. Wick; Mohammed Mullazehi; Lena Håkansson; Johan Rönnelid

IntroductionRheumatoid arthritis (RA) patients with autoantibodies against collagen type II (CII) are characterized by acute RA onset with elevated inflammatory measures and early joint erosions as well as increased production of tumor necrosis factor-α (ΤΝF-α) by peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) stimulated by anti-CII immune complexes (IC) in vitro. Polymorphonuclear granulocytes (PMN) are abundant in RA synovial fluids, where they might interact directly with anti-CII IC in the articular cartilage, but no studies have investigated PMN responses towards anti-CII IC. The aim was to investigate whether PMN react towards anti-CII IC, and to what extent such reactivity might relate to the clinical acute onset RA phenotype associated with elevated levels of anti-CII.MethodsPMN and PBMC isolated from healthy donors were stimulated with IC made with a set of 72 baseline patient sera (24 anti-CII positive, 48 anti-CII negative) chosen from a clinically well-characterized RA cohort with two-year radiological follow-up with Larsen scoring. PMN expression of cluster of differentiation (CD)11b, CD66b, CD16 and CD32 was measured by flow cytometry, whereas PMN production of myeloperoxidase (MPO) and interleukin (IL)-17, and PBMC production of ΤΝF-α was measured with enzyme linked immunosorbent assay.ResultsPMN expression of CD11b, CD66b and MPO, and PBMC production of ΤΝF-α were upregulated whereas PMN expression of CD16 and CD32 were downregulated by anti-CII IC. CD16, CD66b, and MPO production correlated to serum anti-CII levels (Spearman’s ρ = 0.315, 0.675 and 0.253, respectively). CD16 was associated with early joint erosions (P = 0.024, 0.034, 0.046 at baseline, one and two years) and CD66b was associated with changes in joint erosions (P = 0.017 and 0.016, at one and two years compared to baseline, respectively). CD66b was associated with baseline C-reactive protein and PBMC production of ΤΝF-α was associated with baseline erythrocyte sedimentation rate, in accordance with our earlier findings. No clinical associations were observed for MPO or IL-17.ConclusionPMN responses against anti-CII IC are more closely associated with early joint erosions than are PBMC cytokine responses. PMN reactivity against anti-CII IC may contribute to joint destruction in newly diagnosed RA patients with high levels of anti-CII.


Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases | 2007

Anti-collagen type II antibodies in patients with very early synovitis

Karim Raza; Mohammed Mullazehi; Mike Salmon; Christopher D. Buckley; Johan Rönnelid

Anti-type II collagen (anti-CII) antibodies have been reported in between 3% and 27% of patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA).1 3 In contrast with anti-cyclic citrullinated peptide (anti-CCP) antibodies,4 5 anti-CII antibodies are absent before the onset of synovitis6 and decrease over the first few years of disease.2 3 Anti-CII antibody levels thus appear to peak around the time of diagnosis of RA when they are associated with active inflammation.3 The pathological processes operating in the joints of patients with very early synovitis who develop RA are distinct from those in other patients with early synovitis and are characterised by a cytokine profile …


Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases | 2017

Anticollagen type II antibodies are associated with an acute onset rheumatoid arthritis phenotype and prognosticate lower degree of inflammation during 5 years follow-up

Vivek Anand Manivel; Mohammed Mullazehi; Leonid Padyukov; Helga Westerlind; Lars Klareskog; Lars Alfredson; Saedis Saevarsdottir; Johan Rönnelid

Objective Antifibrillar collagen type II (anti-CII) antibody-positive patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) have early but not late signs of increased inflammation and joint erosions. We wanted to replicate this in a large RA cohort, and to relate to human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-DRB1* alleles. Methods Anti-CII and anti-cyclic citrullinated peptide (CCP)2 were measured at baseline in 773 patients with RA from the Swedish Epidemiological Investigation in Rheumatoid Arthritis (EIRA) study with clinical follow-up data from the Swedish Rheumatology Quality Register (SRQ) registry, and 1476 with HLA-DRB1* information. Comparisons were done concerning C reactive protein (CRP), erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR), tender joint count (TJC), swollen joint count (SJC), Disease Activity Score encompassing 28 joints based on ESR (DAS28), DAS28CRP, pain-Visual Analogue Scale (VAS), global-VAS and Health Assessment Questionnaire Score (HAQ) at eight occasions during 5 years, and association with HLA-DRB1* alleles. Results Anti-CII associated with elevated CRP, ESR, SJC, DAS28 and DAS28CRP at diagnosis and up to 6 months, whereas anti-CCP2 associated with SJC and DAS28 from 6 months to 5 years, but not earlier. The anti-CII-associated phenotype was strong, and predominated in anti-CII/anti-CCP2 double-positive patients. Anti-CII was associated with improvements in CRP, ESR, SJC, TJC and DAS28, whereas anti-CCP2 was associated with deteriorations in SJC and DAS28 over time. Anti-CII-positive patients achieved European League Against Rheumatism good or moderate response more often than negative patients. Anti-CII was positively associated with HLA-DRB1*01 and HLA-DRB1*03, with significant interaction, and double-positive individuals had >14 times higher mean anti-CII levels than HLA double negatives. Whereas smoking was associated with elevated anti-CCP2 levels, smokers had lower anti-CII levels. Conclusions Anti-CII seropositive RA represents a distinct phenotype, in many respects representing the converse to the clinical, genetic and smoking associations described for anticitrullinated protein peptide autoantibodies. Although not diagnostically useful, early anti-CII determinations predict favourable inflammatory outcome in RA.


Journal of Immunological Methods | 2016

General false positive ELISA reactions in visceral leishmaniasis. Implications for the use of enzyme immunoassay analyses in tropical Africa.

Amir I. Elshafie; Mohammed Mullazehi; Johan Rönnelid

Leishmaniasis is a neglected disease in tropical countries. Clinical and laboratory features may mimic autoimmune diseases and this can complicate the Leishmania diagnosis. Due to our previous investigation for false anti-CCP2 reactivity in Leishmania-infected subjects and our interest in immunity against the joint-specific collagen type II (CII) in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) we investigated the same cohort for anti-CII antibodies. We found elevated anti-CII reactivity in Leishmania-infected patients as compared to controls. When anti-CII OD values were compared with BSA-blocked control plates we found higher reactivity against BSA than in CII-coated plates in many Leishmania-infected patients. The percentage of such false positive anti-CII reactions increased with inflammatory activity, and was found in almost all Leishmania patients with highly active inflammatory disease, but was as low in Sudanese healthy controls as well as among Swedish RA patients. The correlation coefficients between false positive anti-CII and anti-CCP2 measured with a commercial ELISA were highest for patients with the most inflammatory disease but non-significant for Sudanese controls and Swedish RA patients, arguing that our findings may have general implications for ELISA measurements in leishmaniasis. ELISA investigations in areas endemic for leishmaniasis might benefit from individual-specific control wells for each serum sample. This approach might also be applicable to other geographical areas or patient groups with high incidence of inflammatory and infectious diseases.


Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases | 2013

A5.24 Neutrophil Granulocytes Respond to Surface-Bound Immune Complexes Containing Anti-Type II Collagen Antibodies from RA Patients

Vivek Anand Manivel; Mohammed Mullazehi; Azita Sohrabian; Barbro Persson; Amir I. Elshafie; Efstathios Kavvadas; Johan Rönnelid

Background and Objectives We have earlier shown that surface-bound immune complexes containing anti-type II collagen antibodies (anti-CII IC) from rheumatoid arthritis (RA) patients and anti-CII IC stimulate monocyte proinflammatory cytokine production, associated with an acute onset RA phenotype. Anti-CII IC in joint cartilage are exposed to cells in the synovial fluid (SF). Neutrophil granulocytes are the major cell type in SF, where they co-localise with mononuclear cells (MNC). The objective was to investigate whether also granulocytes respond to anti-CII IC, and whether such a response was dependent on interaction with other cells in SF. Materials and Methods An anti-CII RA serum together with human native collagen (CII) was used to create surface-bound anti-CII IC. Heparinised blood from 8 healthy donors was separated into neutrophil granulocytes (>95% purity) and MNC. For each donor, the granulocyte cell fractions as well as co-cultures (granulocytes + MNC) (0.5 × 10E6/ml of each cell fraction) was cultured on anti-CII IC as well as on negative control IC prepared with normal human serum on CII and in a positive control IC system with purified IgG coated onto plastic. After 18 hours, cells were harvested for the measurement of CD11b, CD66b, CD16 and CD32 on granulocytes by flow cytometry, and supernatant levels of TNF and IL-8 was measured by ELISA. Results In granulocyte cultures both anti-CII IC and control IC induced significant up-regulation of CD11b and CD66b, and significant down-regulation of CD16 and CD32. When the granulocytes were co-cultured with MNC, there was a significant increase in CD11b up-regulation and CD16 down-regulation than granulocytes, with no effect on CD32 and CD66b. In the co-culture system, the anti-CII IC-induced production of IL-8 was significantly increased, but no such difference was noted for TNF. Isolated granulocyte fractions produced very low levels of TNF and IL-8 after IC stimulation. Conclusions Isolated granulocytes respond to RA anti-CII IC in a model system mimicking IC in RA cartilage. The granulocyte responses depend on interaction with MNC. Our anti-CII dependent RA phenotype is a human counterpart to collagen antibody-induced arthritis. Strong granulocyte reactivity to anti-CII IC might therefore be related to the Ncf1 gene involved in NADPH activity important in collagen-induced arthritis models.


Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases | 2010

Anti-type II collagen-immune complex-induced production of interleukin 1β and tumour necrosis factor α stimulate production of matrix metalloproteinases from monocyte/rheumatoid arthritis synovial fibroblast co-cultures

Mohammed Mullazehi; Linda Mathsson; O Feldt; K Schubert; Marina Korotkova; Vivianne Malmström; Johan Rönnelid

We have previously reported that anti-CII-containing immune complexes (anti-CII IC) induced production of tumour necrosis factor (TNF) β, interleukin (IL)1α and IL8 from monocytes via FcγRIIa.1 We have also shown that high levels of anti-CII were associated with IC-induced production of pro-inflammatory cytokines in vitro and increased laboratory signs of inflammation 2 and increased radiological erosions at the time of diagnosis. 3 The objective of this study was to establish an in vitro …

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Jon Lampa

Karolinska Institutet

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Lars Klareskog

Karolinska University Hospital

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Marius C. Wick

Karolinska University Hospital

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Saedis Saevarsdottir

Karolinska University Hospital

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