Endotoxemia and sepsis mortality reduction by non-anticoagulant–activated protein C

EJ Kerschen, JA Fernandez, BC Cooley… - The Journal of …, 2007 - rupress.org
EJ Kerschen, JA Fernandez, BC Cooley, XV Yang, R Sood, LO Mosnier, FJ Castellino…
The Journal of experimental medicine, 2007rupress.org
Activated protein C (APC) reduces mortality of severe sepsis patients but increases the risk
of serious bleeding. APC exerts anticoagulant activity by proteolysis of factors Va/VIIIa. APC
also exerts antiinflammatory and antiapoptotic effects and stabilizes endothelial barrier
function by APC-initiated cell signaling that requires two receptors, endothelial cell protein C
receptor (EPCR) and protease-activated receptor 1 (PAR1). The relative importance of
APC's various activities for efficacy in sepsis is unknown. We used protein engineering of …
Activated protein C (APC) reduces mortality of severe sepsis patients but increases the risk of serious bleeding. APC exerts anticoagulant activity by proteolysis of factors Va/VIIIa. APC also exerts antiinflammatory and antiapoptotic effects and stabilizes endothelial barrier function by APC-initiated cell signaling that requires two receptors, endothelial cell protein C receptor (EPCR) and protease-activated receptor 1 (PAR1). The relative importance of APC's various activities for efficacy in sepsis is unknown. We used protein engineering of mouse APC and genetically altered mice to clarify mechanisms for the efficacy of APC in mouse sepsis models. Mortality reduction in LPS-induced endotoxemia required the enzymatic active site of APC, EPCR, and PAR-1, highlighting a key role for APC's cytoprotective actions. A recombinant APC variant with normal signaling but <10% anticoagulant activity (5A-APC) was as effective as wild-type APC in reducing mortality after LPS challenge, and enhanced the survival of mice subjected to peritonitis induced by gram-positive or -negative bacteria or to polymicrobial peritoneal sepsis triggered by colon ascendens stent implantation. Thus, APC's efficacy in severe sepsis is predominantly based on EPCR- and PAR1-dependent cell signaling, and APC variants with normal cell signaling but reduced anticoagulant activities retain efficacy while reducing the risk of bleeding.
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