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. 2021 Mar 11;11(1):5691.
doi: 10.1038/s41598-021-85272-9.

Unactivated leukocyte expression of C-reactive protein is minimal and not dependent on rs1205 genotype

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Unactivated leukocyte expression of C-reactive protein is minimal and not dependent on rs1205 genotype

L G Best et al. Sci Rep. .

Abstract

C-reactive protein (CRP), a prominent component of the innate immune system, is implicated in the pathophysiology of many conditions. CRP production primarily occurs in the liver; but contributions from other tissues is unclear. The Genotype-Tissue Expression Portal shows essentially no expression in whole blood and reports in the literature are conflicting. Multiple genomic variants influence serum levels of CRP. We measured CRP mRNA expression in leukocytes and sought to determine if rs1205 genotype influences leukocyte expression. Leukocytes were obtained from 20 women differing by genotype. Quantitative, real-time PCR (RT-qPCR) detected CRP and reference gene (GAPDH) mRNA. Leukocyte expression was calculated by the 2ΔCT method, and against a standard curve. Digital drop PCR was also used to calculate expression ratios. Student's t test and linear regression methods examined possible differences between genotypes. During 32 runs (10 replicates each), the RT-qPCR mean (SD) CRP/GAPDH ratio was 3.39 × 10-4 (SD 1.73 × 10-4) and 3.15 × 10-4 (SD 1.64 × 10-4) for TT and CC genotypes respectively, p = 0.76; and digital drop PCR results were similar. Serum CRP was not significantly different between genotypes, nor correlated with leukocyte expression. CRP is minimally expressed in unactivated leukocytes and this expression is not likely influenced by rs1205 genotype.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors declare no competing interests.

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