Pentraxin-3-mediated complement activation in a swine model of renal ischemia/reperfusion injury

Pentraxins are a family of evolutionarily conserved pattern recognition molecules with pivotal roles in innate immunity and inflammation, such as opsonization of pathogens during bacterial and viral infections. In particular, the long Pentraxin 3 (PTX3) has been shown to regulate several aspects of...

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Veröffentlicht in:Aging 2021-04, Vol.13 (8), p.10920-10933
Hauptverfasser: Divella, C., Stasi, A., Franzin, R., Rossini, M., Pontrelli, P., Sallustio, F., Netti, G.S., Ranieri, E., Lacitignola, L., Staffieri, F., Crovace, A.M., Lucarelli, G., Ditonno, P., Battaglia, M., Daha, M.R., Pol, P. van der, Kooten, C. van, Grandaliano, G., Gesualdo, L., Stallone, G., Castellano, G.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Pentraxins are a family of evolutionarily conserved pattern recognition molecules with pivotal roles in innate immunity and inflammation, such as opsonization of pathogens during bacterial and viral infections. In particular, the long Pentraxin 3 (PTX3) has been shown to regulate several aspects of vascular and tissue inflammation during solid organ transplantation.Our study investigated the role of PTX3 as possible modulator of Complement activation in a swine model of renal ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) injury.We demonstrated that I/R injury induced early PTX3 deposits at peritubular and glomerular capillary levels. Confocal laser scanning microscopy revealed PTX3 deposits co-localizing with CD31+ endothelial cells. In addition, PTX3 was associated with infiltrating macrophages (CD163), dendritic cells (SWC3a) and myofibroblasts (FSP1). In particular, we demonstrated a significant PTX3-mediated activation of classical (C1qmediated) and lectin (MBL-mediated) pathways of Complement. Interestingly, PTX3 deposits co-localized with activation of the terminal Complement complex (C5b-9) on endothelial cells, indicating that PTX3-mediated Complement activation occurred mainly at the renal vascular level. In conclusion, these data indicate that PTX3 might be a potential therapeutic target to prevent Complement-induced I/R injury.
DOI:10.18632/aging.202992