S100A8 and S1009 in Autoinflammatory Diseases
Autoinflammatory syndromes including Familial Mediterranean Fever (FMF), PAPA-Syndrome, and PAMI-Syndrome come along with an overactivation of neutrophils, monocytes or macrophages. Genetic mutations in proteins (pyrin/PSTPIP1) that play a role in inflammasome activation and uncontrolled cytokine secretion have been found in patients with autoinflammatory syndromes (Jorch et al., JACI 2023, Holzinger, Fassl et al., JACI 2015). However, these mutated proteins are also associated with the cytoskeleton and migration, but how the mutations affected the crawling, adhesion or transmigration behavior of phagocytes is complete unknown so far. By using intravital lase-scanning confocal and 2-photon microscopy in combination with the CRISPR/Cas technique provides our group the opportunity to study the effects of these mutations more in detail in liver, kidneys, skin, or lymph nodes.