Summary:
Chronic inflammatory reactions which affect the arterial wall can be viewed as an underlying cause of atherosclerosis.
C-reactive protein is an easily measurable marker which reflects the activity of inflammatory
responses. At the same time, CRP represents an active partaker of the inflammatory process. The role CRP
plays in the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis is ambivalent: at the very beginning, it displays anti-inflammatory
properties which contribute to the protection of the arterial wall from atherogenic lipoproteins.
Later on, genetic disposition of the host and the influence of many known risk factors convert CRP’s antiinflammatory
activity into a net pro-inflammatory effect which boosts the development of atherosclerosis.
Both the protective anti-inflammatory and the noxious pro-inflammatory activities of CRP reside in its
capacity to activate the complement cascade. The protective effect of CRP, which is dependent on the plasmatic
regulatory factor H, is carried out by the activation of complement up to the level of fragments
C3b/iC3b. Further, CRP directly induces production of the complement membrane regulatory proteins,
most important of which is the decay-accelerating factor. Membrane regulatory factors form an integral
part of the outer cellular membrane, most importantly that of endothelial cells, resulting in protection of the
latter from autodestructive attacks inflicted by activated complement. One of the complement regulatory
factors is represented by clusterin/apolipoproteinJ. However, according to recent studies, clusterin/apoJ
belongs rather to a group of stress proteins, which display overall protective effects on cellular protein
structures. Protective activities of CRP based on its cooperation with complement regulatory factors are
closely mimicked by the HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors or statins.
Key words:
atherosclerosis – C-reactive protein – complement – regulatory factors – statins.
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