| Literature DB >> 34552600 |
Lawrence A Potempa1, Ibraheem M Rajab1, Margaret E Olson1, Peter C Hart1.
Abstract
C-reactive protein (CRP) was first recognized in the 1940s as a protein that appeared in blood during acute episodes of infectious disease. Its presence and pharmacodynamics were found in essentially all diseases that involved tissue damage and inflammation. Identified as a major component of the innate, unlearned immunity, it became a useful diagnostic marker for the extent of inflammation during disease exacerbation or remission. Efforts to define its true biological role has eluded clear definition for over a half-century. Herein, a unifying concept is presented that explains both pro-inflammatory and anti-inflammatory activities of CRP. This concept involves the recognition and understanding that CRP can be induced to undergo a pronounced, non-proteolytic reorganization of its higher-level protein structures into conformationally distinct isomers with distinctive functional activities. This process occurs when the non-covalently associated globular subunits of the pentameric isoform ("pCRP") are induced to dissociate into a monomeric isoform ("mCRP"). mCRP consistently and potently provides pro-inflammatory activation and amplification activities. pCRP provides weak anti-inflammatory activities consistent with low-level chronic inflammation. mCRP can spontaneously form in purified pCRP reagents in ways that are not immediately recognized during purification and certification analyses. By now understanding the factors that influence pCRP dissociate into mCRP, many published reports investigating CRP as a biological response modifier of host defense can be reevaluated to include a discussion of how each CRP isoform may have affected the generated results. Specific attention is given to in vitro and in vivo studies of CRP as an anti-cancer agent.Entities:
Keywords: C-reactive protein; CRP isoforms; anti-cancer; cancer; inflammation; innate immunity; mCRP
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34552600 PMCID: PMC8450391 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2021.744129
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Comparison of Biochemical Characteristics of Pentameric (pCRP) and modified, monomeric (mCRP) C-reactive protein.
| Characteristic | Pentameric CRP (pCRP) | Modified, monomeric CRP (mCRP) |
|---|---|---|
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➢ Mr 116, 145 ➢ 5 non-glycosylated identical globular subunits, non-covalently associated in cyclic symmetry ➢ Flat discoid shape with a central void ➢ Each subunit contains 2 bound calcium ions and one binding pocket for Phosphocholine (PC) ➢ All PC binding pockets orient to one face of the disc; the opposite face contains a helical segment that interacts with other ligands involving effector responses ➢ Average diameter by EM 10.42 ± 0.08 |
➢ Mr 23,229 ➢ Free subunit that is conformationally distinct (relaxed) from that subunit found in pCRP ➢ Isolated protein has reduced aqueous solubility and will self-aggregate into multimers as a function of ionic strength and presence of divalent cations ➢ Average diameter by EM |14.425 ± 0.33 |
|
| Gamma | Alpha |
|
| 6.4 | 5.4 |
|
| 40 ± 5 Å | 30 ± 4 Å |
|
| ||
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| > 1 mg/ml | < 100 ug/ml |
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| Decreased | > 600 ug/ml |
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➢ Stabilizes (compacts) pentamer quaternary structure ➢ Confers resistance to proteolysis ➢ Regulates structures that allows for binding to PC ligand |
➢ Calcium removal facilitates spontaneous dissociation of the pentamer and expression of the mCRP isoform ➢ Once formed, calcium and other divalent cations will lead to protein aggregation and precipitation |
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➢ Opsonizes pathogens ➢ Binds perturbed membranes where PC groups become exposed ➢ Neutralizes PAF-induced neutrophil degranulation and RO production ➢ Scavenges for/facilities removal of nucleic acid/chromatin cell debris ➢ Activates classical complement pathway ➢ Regulates alternative complement pathway activation by binding Factor H ➢ Stimulate leukocyte phagocytosis and oxidative metabolism ➢ Is weakly ant-inflammatory |
➢ Increases P-selection expression ➢ Increases platelet activation and aggregation with neutrophils ➢ Increases leukocyte adhesion to endothelial cells, synthesis and release of IL-8 synthesis and MCP-1 ➢ Augments respiratory burst response ➢ Delays apoptosis ➢ Stimulates cytokine release ➢ Increases ICAM-1, VCAM-1, and E-Selection expression on endothelialcells ➢ Activates classic complement and inhibits alternative complement pathway activation |
References: 4, 5 and 8–21.
Activities of pCRP and mCRP with various Cancer models.
| Cancer Type | CRP Reagent Used | Mechanistic Notes | References |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| Isolated CRP |
72 hr. growth in tissue culture Added with lymphocytes Stopped growth of tumor cells |
➢ ( |
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| CRP encapsulated in liposomes |
Anti-metastatic, especially when injected early in disease course Non-encapsulated CRP was not similary effective |
➢ ( |
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| CRP encapsulated in liposomes |
Showed tumoricidal activity Anti-tumor response found in exudate macrophages and involved enhanced oxidate metabolism |
➢ ( |
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| CRP encapsulated in liposomes |
Treatment resulted in fewer and smaller liver metastases |
➢ ( |
|
| CRP encapsulated in liposomes |
Stimulated peritoneal, exudate cells Required an intact complement system |
➢ ( ➢ ( |
|
| Isolated CRP Heat aggregated CRP lost tumoricidal activity |
CRP added to tissue cultured cells CRP affect did not involve lymphokines CRP-activated macrophages did not affect normal fibroblast |
➢ ( |
|
| Isolate CRP |
CRP activated peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMs) but required incubation on glass–adherent cells for 20-44 hr. Tumoricidal activity involved superoxide anion generation Normal PBMs were similarly activated by CRP but normal fibroblasts and glial cells were not |
➢ ( |
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| Peptides derived from CRP in liposomes |
Identified a peptide with anti-tumor and anti-lung metastatic activity Peptide 174IYLGGPFSPNVL185 Stimulated Peripheral blood MAC 1+ (CR3+) cells Required encapsulated in a liposome |
➢ ( |
|
| CRP encapsulated in liposome |
Increased IL-1 and TNF secretion from monocytes and alveolar macrophages When IL-2 was co-administered with CRP regeant, reported enhanced Influenced IL-1-β, IL-6 and TNF-α secretion on cultured monocytes |
➢ ( ➢ ( ➢ ( |
|
| mCRP in LUVETS |
mCRP alone or in LUVETS slowed tumor growth, caused necrosis at site of tumor growth and reduced metastasis pCRP alone or in LUVETS was ineffective in slowing tumor growth or preventing metastasis |
➢ ( |
|
| mCRP Recombinant nCRP |
Slower tumor growth Cased necrosis at tumor site Anti-cancer effects observed in nude mice |
➢ See ➢ ( |