Plasmin is a natural trigger for bradykinin production in patients with hereditary angioedema with factor XII mutations
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Plasmin is a natural trigger for bradykinin production in patients with hereditary angioedema with factor XII mutations. / de Maat, Steven; Björkqvist, Jenny; Suffritti, Chiara; Wiesenekker, Chantal P; Nagtegaal, Willem; Koekman, Arnold; van Dooremalen, Sanne; Pasterkamp, Gerard; de Groot, Philip G; Cicardi, Marco; Renné, Thomas; Maas, Coen.
in: J ALLERGY CLIN IMMUN, Jahrgang 138, Nr. 5, 06.04.2016, S. 1414-1423.e9.Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/Zeitung › SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz › Forschung › Begutachtung
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T1 - Plasmin is a natural trigger for bradykinin production in patients with hereditary angioedema with factor XII mutations
AU - de Maat, Steven
AU - Björkqvist, Jenny
AU - Suffritti, Chiara
AU - Wiesenekker, Chantal P
AU - Nagtegaal, Willem
AU - Koekman, Arnold
AU - van Dooremalen, Sanne
AU - Pasterkamp, Gerard
AU - de Groot, Philip G
AU - Cicardi, Marco
AU - Renné, Thomas
AU - Maas, Coen
N1 - Copyright © 2016 American Academy of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
PY - 2016/4/6
Y1 - 2016/4/6
N2 - BACKGROUND: Patients with angioedema experience unpredictable attacks of tissue swelling in which bradykinin is implicated. Several distinct mutations in Factor XII (FXII) are associated with hereditary angioedema (HAE) in the presence of normal C1 esterase inhibitor activity (FXII-HAE). The underlying disease mechanisms are unclear, which complicates diagnosis and treatment.OBJECTIVE: We sought to identify the natural trigger for FXII activation, which causes uncontrolled bradykinin production in patients with FXII-HAE.METHODS: We generated recombinant variants of FXII, representing health and disease, and studied their behavior in functional studies. We investigated bradykinin-forming pathways in blood plasma with newly developed nanobody-based analytic methods.RESULTS: We here report that FXII-HAE mutations collectively introduce new sites that are sensitive to enzymatic cleavage by plasmin. These FXII mutants rapidly activate after cleavage by plasmin, escape from inhibition through C1 esterase inhibitor, and elicit excessive bradykinin formation. Furthermore, our findings indicate that plasmin modulates disease activity in patients with FXII-HAE. Finally, we show that soluble lysine analogs attenuate this mechanism, explaining their therapeutic value in patients with HAE.CONCLUSION: Our findings indicate a new pathway for bradykinin formation in patients with HAE, in which FXII is cleaved and activated by plasmin. This should lead to the identification of new markers for diagnosis and targets for treatment.
AB - BACKGROUND: Patients with angioedema experience unpredictable attacks of tissue swelling in which bradykinin is implicated. Several distinct mutations in Factor XII (FXII) are associated with hereditary angioedema (HAE) in the presence of normal C1 esterase inhibitor activity (FXII-HAE). The underlying disease mechanisms are unclear, which complicates diagnosis and treatment.OBJECTIVE: We sought to identify the natural trigger for FXII activation, which causes uncontrolled bradykinin production in patients with FXII-HAE.METHODS: We generated recombinant variants of FXII, representing health and disease, and studied their behavior in functional studies. We investigated bradykinin-forming pathways in blood plasma with newly developed nanobody-based analytic methods.RESULTS: We here report that FXII-HAE mutations collectively introduce new sites that are sensitive to enzymatic cleavage by plasmin. These FXII mutants rapidly activate after cleavage by plasmin, escape from inhibition through C1 esterase inhibitor, and elicit excessive bradykinin formation. Furthermore, our findings indicate that plasmin modulates disease activity in patients with FXII-HAE. Finally, we show that soluble lysine analogs attenuate this mechanism, explaining their therapeutic value in patients with HAE.CONCLUSION: Our findings indicate a new pathway for bradykinin formation in patients with HAE, in which FXII is cleaved and activated by plasmin. This should lead to the identification of new markers for diagnosis and targets for treatment.
U2 - 10.1016/j.jaci.2016.02.021
DO - 10.1016/j.jaci.2016.02.021
M3 - SCORING: Journal article
C2 - 27130860
VL - 138
SP - 1414-1423.e9
JO - J ALLERGY CLIN IMMUN
JF - J ALLERGY CLIN IMMUN
SN - 0091-6749
IS - 5
ER -