Minireview: C-Reactive Protein
Minireview: C-Reactive Protein
Minireview: C-Reactive Protein
Vol. 279, No. 47, Issue of November 19, pp. 4848748490, 2004
2004 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.
Printed in U.S.A.
Minireview
C-reactive Protein*
Published, JBC Papers in Press, August 26, 2004,
DOI 10.1074/jbc.R400025200
Steven Black, Irving Kushner,
and David Samols
From the Department of Biochemistry,
Case Western Reserve University,
Cleveland, Ohio 44106 and Department of Medicine,
Case Western Reserve University, MetroHealth Campus,
Cleveland, Ohio 44109
Protein Structure
CRP consists of five identical, noncovalently associated 23kDa protomers arranged symmetrically around a central pore.
The term pentraxins has been used to describe the family of
related proteins with this structure. Each protomer has been
found by x-ray crystallography to be folded into two antiparallel sheets with a flattened jellyroll topology similar to that of
lectins such as concanavalin A (8, 9). Each protomer has a
recognition face with a phosphocholine binding site consisting
of two coordinated calcium ions adjacent to a hydrophobic
pocket. The co-crystal structure of CRP with phosphocholine
(Fig. 1) suggests that Phe-66 and Glu-81 are the two key
residues mediating the binding of phosphocholine to CRP (9).
Phe-66 provides hydrophobic interactions with the methyl
groups of phosphocholine whereas Glu-81 is found on the opposite end of the pocket where it interacts with the positively
charged choline nitrogen. The importance of both residues has
been confirmed by mutagenesis studies (10, 11).
The opposite face of the pentamer is the effector face, where
complement C1q binds and Fc receptors are presumed to bind.
A cleft extends from the center of the protomer to the central
48487
edly, as much as 1000-fold or more, after an acute inflammatory stimulus, largely reflecting increased synthesis by hepatocytes. CRP induction is part of a larger picture of
reorchestration of liver gene expression during inflammatory
states, the acute phase response, in which synthesis of many
plasma proteins is increased, whereas that of a smaller number, notably albumin, is decreased. At least 40 plasma proteins
are defined as acute phase proteins, based on changes in circulating concentration of at least 25% after an inflammatory
stimulus. This group includes clotting proteins, complement
factors, anti-proteases, and transport proteins (reviewed in
Ref. 3). These changes presumably contribute to defensive or
adaptive capabilities.
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pore of the pentamer, and several residues along the boundaries of this cleft have been shown to be critical for the binding
of CRP to C1q, including Asp-112 and Tyr-175 (12, 13). The
crystal structure of the globular head domain of C1q was recently solved (14), and a model for C1q binding to CRP was
proposed in which the top of the predominantly positively
charged C1q head interacts with the predominantly negatively
charged central pore of the CRP pentamer. In this model, which
displays shape complementarity, the globular head of C1q
spans the central pore of CRP and interacts with two of the five
protomers of the pentamer (Fig. 2). The strict steric requirements for CRP interaction with C1q in this model imply that
optimal C1q binding is accompanied by slight conformational
changes in the CRP structure (14). These conformational
changes appear to differ depending on the ligand to which CRP
is bound (11).
In Vitro Effects
Further insight into the biologic function or functions of CRP
is provided by the ligands and effector molecules with which it
interacts. Phosphocholine is found in a number of bacterial
species and is a constituent of sphingomyelin and phosphatidylcholine in eukaryotic membranes. However, the head
groups of these phospholipids are inaccessible to CRP in normal cells, so that CRP can bind to these molecules only in
damaged and apoptotic cells (1518). In addition to phosphocholine, CRP can bind to a wide variety of other ligands, including phosphoethanolamine, chromatin, histones, fibronectin, small nuclear ribonucleoproteins, laminin, and polycations
(11, 19). Ligand-bound or aggregated CRP efficiently activates
the classical complement pathway through direct interaction
with C1q. There is evidence that CRP can interact with the
immunoglobulin receptors FcRI and FcRII as well, eliciting a
response from phagocytic cells. The ability to recognize pathogens with subsequent recruitment and activation of complement, as well as effects on phagocytic cells, constitute important components of the first line of host defense.
48489
In Vivo Effects
In contrast to humans, plasma levels of mouse CRP rarely
exceed 2 g/ml following inflammatory stimuli. Ablation of the
murine CRP gene by homologous recombination has not been
reported. Rather, the murine CRP response represents an evolutionary oddity, a natural knockdown, that has been exploited in a variety of studies utilizing exogenous or transgenic
CRP to study the effects of CRP in vivo.
The ability of CRP to protect mice against bacterial infection
by various species has been well established. These species
include S. pneumoniae (34, 35) and Haemophilus influenza (36,
37), which have phosphocholine-rich surfaces, and Salmonella
enterica serovar Typhimurium, which has no known surface
phosphocholine, although its cell membrane is known to be rich
in another CRP ligand, phosphoethanolamine (38). Protection
is presumably mediated through CRP binding to phosphocholine or phosphoethanolamine, followed by activation of the
classical complement pathway. CRP protection of mice infected
with S. pneumoniae has been shown to require an intact complement system (39) but does not require interaction with
FcRs (39, 40).
CRP protective effects are not limited to bacteria. CRP has
been shown to play a protective role in a variety of inflammatory conditions, including protecting mice from lethal challenge
with bacterial lipopolysaccharide and various mediators of inflammation (41). The former has been shown to require Fc
Modified CRP
Denatured and aggregated forms of CRP (neo-CRP or modified CRP) have been reported to be powerfully pro-inflammatory in a number of experimental systems, although the existence of this material in vivo has not been unequivocally
established (reviewed in Ref. 48). It is conceivable that at local
sites of deposition, small amounts of modified CRP may be
generated with a set of properties distinct from those of the
native protein. It has recently been reported that modified CRP
increased the release of the inflammatory mediators monocyte
chemoattractant protein-1 and IL-8 and up-regulated the expression of ICAM-1 in endothelial cells. In this model, modified
CRP was shown to be a much more potent inducer than native
CRP (49).
48490
Summary
CRP is an ancient protein whose initial role as a pattern
recognition molecule may have been to defend against bacterial
infections, but whose present biological role appears quite complex. It is protective against a variety of bacterial infections
and inflammatory stimuli in mice. It is likely that the activity
of CRP in humans, either pro- or anti-inflammatory is dependent on the context in which it is acting. Recent data have raised
the possibility that it may participate in the pathogenesis of
disease.
AcknowledgmentWe thank Martin Snider for his critical evaluation of this manuscript.
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