2015
DOI: 10.1182/blood-2014-05-579110
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C-reactive protein enhances IgG-mediated phagocyte responses and thrombocytopenia

Abstract: Key Points• CRP enhances IgG-mediated respiratory burst and phagocytosis of platelets in vitro and their clearance in vivo.• CRP levels are increased in ITP patients and correlate with platelet counts and bleeding severity and predict time to recovery.Immune-mediated platelet destruction is most frequently caused by allo-or autoantibodies via Fcg receptor-dependent phagocytosis. Disease severity can be predicted neither by antibody isotype nor by titer, indicating that other factors play a role. Here we show t… Show more

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Cited by 72 publications
(84 citation statements)
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“…CRP was found to be increased in children with ITP, and treatment with IVIg was associated with increased platelet counts, decreased CRP levels, and reduced clinical bleeding severity (142). Moreover, elevated CRP at diagnosis corresponded to slower platelet count recovery after 3 mo (142). The suggested mechanism of action was independent of platelet FcgRIIA but based on platelet oxidation (triggered by anti-platelet Abs and the phagocyte NADPH oxidase system), which resulted in exposure of platelet phosphorylcholine residues to which CRP could bind and, thereby, enhance IgG-mediated platelet phagocytosis via interaction with phagocytic FcRs (142).…”
Section: Infections and Thrombocytopeniamentioning
confidence: 93%
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“…CRP was found to be increased in children with ITP, and treatment with IVIg was associated with increased platelet counts, decreased CRP levels, and reduced clinical bleeding severity (142). Moreover, elevated CRP at diagnosis corresponded to slower platelet count recovery after 3 mo (142). The suggested mechanism of action was independent of platelet FcgRIIA but based on platelet oxidation (triggered by anti-platelet Abs and the phagocyte NADPH oxidase system), which resulted in exposure of platelet phosphorylcholine residues to which CRP could bind and, thereby, enhance IgG-mediated platelet phagocytosis via interaction with phagocytic FcRs (142).…”
Section: Infections and Thrombocytopeniamentioning
confidence: 93%
“…Moreover, elevated CRP at diagnosis corresponded to slower platelet count recovery after 3 mo (142). The suggested mechanism of action was independent of platelet FcgRIIA but based on platelet oxidation (triggered by anti-platelet Abs and the phagocyte NADPH oxidase system), which resulted in exposure of platelet phosphorylcholine residues to which CRP could bind and, thereby, enhance IgG-mediated platelet phagocytosis via interaction with phagocytic FcRs (142). Therefore, CRP could be an important factor in Ab-mediated platelet destruction in bacterial (Gramnegative and/or Gram-positive) or viral infections associated with ITP.…”
Section: Infections and Thrombocytopeniamentioning
confidence: 95%
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“…The study does not exclude the possibility that CRP may also be involved in other inflammatory processes leading to TRALI, including enhancing antibody-mediated respiratory burst by neutrophils, 9 synergizing with MHC class I antibodies in binding to the endothelium, 5,10 and causing pulmonary vascular leakage and/or complement cascade activation. The source of the MIP-2 secretion was not shown; however, their previous work demonstrated the source of MIP-2 secretion to be blood monocytes.…”
mentioning
confidence: 93%