Association of IgG1 Antibody Clearance with FcγRIIA Polymorphism and Platelet Count in Infliximab-Treated Patients.
Gilles ThibaultGilles PaintaudHsueh Cheng SungLaurie LajoieEdouard Louisnull The GetaidCeline DesvignesHervé WatierValérie Gouilleux-GruartDavid TernantPublished in: International journal of molecular sciences (2021)
The FcγRIIA/CD32A is mainly expressed on platelets, myeloid and several endothelial cells. Its affinity is considered insufficient for allowing significant binding of monomeric IgG, while its H131R polymorphism (histidine > arginine at position 131) influences affinity for multimeric IgG2. Platelet FcγRIIA has been reported to contribute to IgG-containing immune-complexe clearance. Given our finding that platelet FcγRIIA actually binds monomeric IgG, we investigated the role of platelets and FcγRIIA in IgG antibody elimination. We used pharmacokinetics analysis of infliximab (IgG1) in individuals with controlled Crohn's disease. The influence of platelet count and FcγRIIA polymorphism was quantified by multivariate linear modelling. The infliximab half-life increased with R allele number (13.2, 14.4 and 15.6 days for HH, HR and RR patients, respectively). It decreased with increasing platelet count in R carriers: from ≈20 days (RR) and ≈17 days (HR) at 150 × 109/L, respectively, to ≈13 days (both HR and RR) at 350 × 109/L. Moreover, a flow cytometry assay showed that infliximab and monomeric IgG1 bound efficiently to platelet FcγRIIA H and R allotypes, whereas panitumumab and IgG2 bound poorly to the latter. We propose that infliximab (and presumably any IgG1 antibody) elimination is partly due to an unappreciated mechanism dependent on binding to platelet FcγRIIA, which is probably tuned by its affinity for IgG2.
Keyphrases
- end stage renal disease
- endothelial cells
- ejection fraction
- newly diagnosed
- chronic kidney disease
- nitric oxide
- flow cytometry
- prognostic factors
- peripheral blood
- high throughput
- bone marrow
- acute myeloid leukemia
- mass spectrometry
- transcription factor
- single cell
- patient reported outcomes
- high glucose
- capillary electrophoresis
- metastatic colorectal cancer
- binding protein