A conformational change of C-reactive protein drives neutrophil extracellular trap formation in inflammation.

Ebru Karasu; Rebecca Halbgebauer; Lena Schütte; Johannes Greven; Felix M Bläsius; Johannes Zeller; Oscar Winninger; David Braig; David Alexander Christian Messerer; Bettina Berger; Hendrik Feuerstein; Anke Schultze; Karlheinz Peter; Uwe Knippschild; Klemens Horst; Frank Hildebrand; Steffen U Eisenhardt; Markus Huber-Lang
Abstract
C-reactive protein (CRP) represents a routine diagnostic marker of inflammation. Dissociation of native pentameric CRP (pCRP) into the monomeric structure (mCRP) liberates proinflammatory features, presumably contributing to excessive immune cell activation via unknown molecular mechanisms. In a multi-translational study of systemic inflammation, we found a time- and inflammation-dependent pCRP dissociation into mCRP. We were able to confirm that mCRP co-localizes with leukocytes at the site of injury after polytrauma and therefore assessed whether the CRP conformation potentiates neutrophil activation. We found mCRP-induced neutrophil-extracellular trap formation in vitro and ex vivo involving nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate oxidase activation, p38/mitogen-activated protein kinase signaling, and histone H3 citrullination. Mimicking the trauma milieu in a human ex vivo whole blood model, we found significant mCRP generation as well as NET formation, prevented by blocking pCRP conformational changes. Our data provide novel molecular insights how CRP dissociation contributes to neutrophil activation as driver of various inflammatory disorders.
Journal BMC BIOLOGY
ISSN 1741-7007
Published 07 Jan 2025
Volume 23
Issue 1
Pages 4
DOI 10.1186/s12915-024-02093-8
Type Journal Article
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