Monomeric C-reactive protein regulates fibronectin mediated monocyte adhesion

2020 
Abstract The acute phase reactant C-reactive protein (CRP) binds with high affinity to fibronectin (FN), but this binding occurs only at pH 6.5 or lower, and the binding is inhibited by calcium ions at physiological pH. Since CRP in the circulating blood exists in a calcium-binding form, the interaction between CRP and FN in vivo has been uncertain. CRP can undergo a conformational rearrangement in the absence of calcium or in the local microenvironment (e.g., acidic pH) of inflamed tissue to dissociate into monomeric CRP (mCRP). Therefore, we tested whether these discrepancies can be explained by the different isoforms and locations of CRP. Surface plasmon resonance and ELISA assays showed that mCRP binds with high affinity to FN, and the binding of mCRP to FN was unaffected by calcium or pH. Peptide competition assay, deletion mutant binding assay and protein docking analyse verified that the binding site of mCRP to FN is residues a.a.35–47. Furthermore, mCRP can significantly enhance the adhesion of monocytes to FN as well as upregulate the adhesion molecules expression on endothelial cell. Colocalization of mCRP with FN was observed in mice with DSS-induced colitis, whereas there was very little signal orcolocalization of CRP. These results provide in vitro and in vivo evidence that mCRP formed by local dissociation from circulating CRP is the major isoform that interacts with FN and regulates FN-mediated monocyte adhesion, which is involved in the pro-inflammatory process.
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