To investigate the role of complement protein factor B (Bf) and alternative pathway activity in vivo, and to test the hypothesized potential genetic lethal effect of Bf deficiency, the murine Bf gene was interrupted by exchange of exon 3 through exon 7 (including the factor D cleaving site) with the neo r gene. Mice heterozygous for the targeted Bf allele were interbred, yielding Bf-deficient offspring after the F 1 generation at a frequency suggesting that Bf deficiency alone has no major effect on fertility or fetal development. However, in the context of one or more genes derived from the 129 mouse strain, offspring homozygous for Bf deficiency were generated at less than expected numbers (P ؍ 0.012). Bf-deficient mice showed no gross phenotypic difference from wild-type littermates. Sera from Bf-deficient mice lacked detectable alternative complement pathway activity; purified mouse Bf overcame the deficit. Classical pathway-dependent total hemolytic activity was lower in Bf-deficient than wild-type mice, possibly ref lecting loss of the alternative pathway amplification loop. Lymphoid organ structure and IgG1 antibody response to a T-dependent antigen appeared normal in Bf-deficient mice. Sensitivity to lethal endotoxic shock was not significantly altered in Bf-deficient mice. Thus, deficiency of Bf and alternative complement activation pathway led to a less dramatic phenotype than expected. Nevertheless, these mice provide an excellent model for the assessment of the role of Bf and the alternative pathway in host defense and other functions in vivo.
In systemic lupus erythematosus, the renal deposition of complement-containing immune complexes initiates an inflammatory cascade resulting in glomerulonephritis. Activation of the classical complement pathway with deposition of C3 is pathogenic in lupus nephritis. Although the alternative complement pathway is activated in lupus nephritis, its role in disease pathogenesis is unknown. To determine the role of the alternative pathway in lupus nephritis, complement factor B-deficient mice were backcrossed to MRL/lpr mice. MRL/lpr mice develop a spontaneous lupus-like disease characterized by immune complex glomerulonephritis. We derived complement factor B wild-type (B+/+), homozygous knockout (B−/−), and heterozygous (B+/−) MRL/lpr mice. Compared with B+/− or B+/+ mice, MRL/lpr B−/− mice developed significantly less proteinuria, less glomerular IgG deposition, and decreased renal scores as well as lower IgG3 cryoglobulin production and vasculitis. Serum C3 levels were normal in the B−/− mice compared with significantly decreased levels in the other two groups. These results suggest that: 1) factor B plays an important role in the pathogenesis of glomerulonephritis and vasculitis in MRL/lpr mice; and 2) activation of the alternative pathway, either by the amplification loop or by IgA immune complexes, has a prominent effect on serum C3 levels in this lupus model.
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