6533b7d5fe1ef96bd126511b

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Complement C5 but not C3 is expendable for tissue factor activation by cofactor-independent antiphospholipid antibodies

Svenja RitterWolfram RufTanja FalterAnne HollerbachKarl J. LacknerNadine Müller-callejaNadine Müller-calleja

subject

inorganic chemicals0301 basic medicineComplement factor I030204 cardiovascular system & hematologyMonocytesImmunoglobulin GThromboplastinThrombosis and HemostasisMice03 medical and health sciencesTissue factor0302 clinical medicineimmune system diseasesmedicineAnimalsPlateletneoplasmsBlood CoagulationMice KnockoutVenous ThrombosisComplement component 5biologyChemistryMonocyteComplement C5Complement C3Hematologynervous system diseasesbody regions030104 developmental biologymedicine.anatomical_structureCoagulationAntibodies Antiphospholipidbiology.proteinCancer researchAntibody

description

The complement and coagulation cascades interact at multiple levels in thrombosis and inflammatory diseases. In venous thrombosis, complement factor 3 (C3) is crucial for platelet and tissue factor (TF) procoagulant activation dependent on protein disulfide isomerase (PDI). Furthermore, C5 selectively contributes to the exposure of leukocyte procoagulant phosphatidylserine (PS), which is a prerequisite for rapid activation of monocyte TF and fibrin formation in thrombosis. Here, we show that monoclonal cofactor-independent antiphospholipid antibodies (aPLs) rapidly activate TF on myelomonocytic cells. TF activation is blocked by PDI inhibitor and an anti-TF antibody interfering with PDI binding to TF, and requires C3 but unexpectedly not C5. Other prothrombotic, complement-fixing antibodies, for example, antithymocyte globulin, typically induce TF activation dependent on C5b-7-mediated PS exposure on the outer membrane of monocytes. We show that aPLs directly induce procoagulant PS exposure independent of C5. Accordingly, mice deficient in C3, but not mice deficient in C5, are protected from in vivo thrombus formation induced by cofactor-independent aPLs. Only immunoglobulin G (IgG) fractions with cofactor-independent anticardiolipin reactivity from patients with antiphospholipid syndrome (APS) induce complement-independent monocyte PS exposure and PDI-dependent TF activation. Neither a human monoclonal aPL directed against β2-glycoprotein I (β2GPI) nor patient IgG with selective reactivity to β2GPI rapidly activated monocyte TF. These results indicate that inhibitors of PDI and TF, but not necessarily clinically available drugs targeting C5, have therapeutic benefit in preventing thrombosis associated with APS caused by pathogenic aPLs primarily reactive with lipid, independent of β2GPI.

https://doi.org/10.1182/bloodadvances.2018017095