Nature Communications (Sep 2024)

A single-domain antibody targeting factor XII inhibits both thrombosis and inflammation

  • Pengfei Xu,
  • Yingjie Zhang,
  • Junyan Guo,
  • Huihui Li,
  • Sandra Konrath,
  • Peng Zhou,
  • Liming Cai,
  • Haojie Rao,
  • Hong Chen,
  • Jian Lin,
  • Zhao Cui,
  • Bingyang Ji,
  • Jianwei Wang,
  • Nailin Li,
  • De-Pei Liu,
  • Thomas Renné,
  • Miao Wang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-51745-4
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 14

Abstract

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Abstract Factor XII (FXII) is the zymogen of the plasma protease FXIIa that activates the intrinsic coagulation pathway and the kallikrein kinin-system. The role of FXII in inflammation has been obscure. Here, we report a single-domain antibody (nanobody, Nb) fused to the Fc region of a human immunoglobulin (Nb-Fc) that recognizes FXII in a conformation-dependent manner and interferes with FXIIa formation. Nb-Fc treatment inhibited arterial thrombosis in male mice without affecting hemostasis. In a mouse model of extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO), FXII inhibition or knockout reduced thrombus deposition on oxygenator membranes and systemic microvascular thrombi. ECMO increased circulating levels of D-dimer, alkaline phosphatase, creatinine and TNF-α and triggered microvascular neutrophil adherence, platelet aggregation and their interaction, which were substantially attenuated by FXII blockade. Both Nb-Fc treatment and FXII knockout markedly ameliorated immune complex-induced local vasculitis and anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antibody-induced systemic vasculitis, consistent with selectively suppressed neutrophil migration. In human blood microfluidic analysis, Nb-Fc treatment prevented collagen-induced fibrin deposition and neutrophil adhesion/activation. Thus, FXII is an important mediator of inflammatory responses in vasculitis and ECMO, and Nb-Fc provides a promising approach to alleviate thrombo-inflammatory disorders.