SummaryComplement is viewed as a critical serum-operative component of innate immunity, with processing of its key component, C3, into activation fragments C3a and C3b confined to the extracellular space. We report here that C3 activation also occurred intracellularly. We found that the T cell-expressed protease cathepsin L (CTSL) processed C3 into biologically active C3a and C3b. Resting T cells contained stores of endosomal and lysosomal C3 and CTSL and substantial amounts of CTSL-generated C3a. While “tonic” intracellular C3a generation was required for homeostatic T cell survival, shuttling of this intracellular C3-activation-system to the cell surface upon T cell stimulation induced autocrine proinflammatory cytokine production. Furthermore, T cells from patients with autoimmune arthritis demonstrated hyperactive intracellular complement activation and interferon-γ production and CTSL inhibition corrected this deregulated phenotype. Importantly, intracellular C3a was observed in all examined cell populations, suggesting that intracellular complement activation might be of broad physiological significance.
Membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis type II (MPGN II)
The alternative pathway of complement is important in innate immunity, attacking not only microbes but all unprotected biological surfaces through powerful amplification. It is unresolved how host and nonhost surfaces are distinguished at the molecular level, but key components are domains 19-20 of the complement regulator factor H (FH), which interact with host (i.e., nonactivator surface glycosaminoglycans or sialic acids) and the C3d part of C3b. Our structure of the FH19-20:C3d complex at 2.3-Å resolution shows that FH19-20 has two distinct binding sites, FH19 and FH20, for C3b. We show simultaneous binding of FH19 to C3b and FH20 to nonactivator surface glycosaminoglycans, and we show that both of these interactions are necessary for full binding of FH to C3b on nonactivator surfaces (i.e., for target discrimination). We also show that C3d could replace glycosaminoglycan binding to FH20, thus providing a feedback control for preventing excess C3b deposition and complement amplification. This explains the molecular basis of atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome, where mutations on the binding interfaces between FH19-20 and C3d or between FH20 and glycosaminoglycans lead to complement attack against host surfaces. structure and function | X-ray crystallography | hemolysis | kidney diseases | human mutations P reviously unencountered microbes invading a human body must be rapidly recognized and eliminated. This is the function of innate immunity, which includes the alternative pathway (AP) of complement. AP components can attack targets with hydroxyl or amine groups (i.e., all biological surfaces). This is a powerful defense mechanism, because there is rapid amplification leading to efficient opsonization or target lysis by the membrane attack complex (MAC). The AP attack is, therefore, also potentially dangerous for the host if one's cells and acellular structures are not protected.The AP activation is based on spontaneous hydrolysis of C3 in plasma leading to production of C3b, which then randomly attaches onto any surface hydroxyl or amine group through a reactive thioester located on the C3d part [i.e., thioester domain (TED)] of C3b. If these surface-attached C3b molecules are not quickly inactivated to iC3b and C3d, C3b deposition is rapidly amplified by a positive enzymatic feedback loop, leading to opsonophagocytosis and formation of the lytic membrane attack complex. On host surfaces, which are naturally nonactivators of the AP, efficient down-regulation of bound C3b occurs in three ways: factor I-mediated cleavage of C3b to inactive iC3b, acceleration of the decay of the preformed C3 convertases, or inhibition of factor B binding to C3b. Factor H (FH) is required for all these. It also down-regulates C3b deposition on noncellular surfaces, such as the heparan sulfate-rich glomerular basement membrane. FH is, thus, essential for restricting AP attack against host surfaces while allowing AP attack against foreign surfaces (i.e., for target discrimination) (1). A long-standing central question in complemen...
Spirochete bacteria of the Borrelia burgdorferi sensu lato complex cause Lyme borreliosis. The three pathogenic subspecies Borrelia garinii, Borrelia afzelii, and Borrelia burgdorferi sensu stricto differ in their disease profiles and susceptibility to complement lysis. We investigated whether complement resistance of Borreliae could be due to acquisition of the main soluble inhibitors of the alternative complement pathway, factor H and the factor H-like protein 1. When exposed to nonimmune EDTA-plasma, the serum-resistant B. afzelii and B. burgdorferi sensu stricto strains bound factor H/factor H-like protein 1 to their surfaces. Assays with radiolabeled proteins showed that factor H bound strongly to the B. burgdorferi sensu stricto strain. To identify factor H ligands on the borrelial surface, we analyzed a panel of outer surface proteins of B. burgdorferi sensu stricto with the surface plasmon resonance technique. The outer surface lipoprotein OspE was identified as a specific ligand for factor H. Using recombinant constructs of factor H, the binding site for OspE was localized to the C-terminal short consensus repeat domains 15-20. Specific binding of factor H to B. burgdorferi sensu stricto OspE may help the pathogen to evade complement attack and phagocytosis.
The alternative complement pathway is capable of discriminating human cells and tissues from a wide variety of potential pathogens. It has been recently demonstrated that attachment of complement component C3b to activator-derived molecules (e.g., small polysaccharides) restricts inactivation of C3b by factors H and I in a manner similar to activator surfaces. It is now shown that restriction is reversed by certain soluble polyanions (e.g., sialoglycopeptides, heparin, or dextran sulfate) that mimic the effects of sialic acid and glycosaminoglycans on human cells and tissues. Fluid-phase polyanions enhanced binding of factor H to C3b attached to activating particles, indicating that the effect resulted from increased affinity between C3b and factor H. The enhancement was specific for activator-bound C3b since no enhancement was observed on nonactivating particles. While several polyanions could cause this effect, some polyanions could not, indicating specificity. The active polyanions also inhibited lysis of cells via the alternative pathway. The binding site for sialic acid appears to reside on factor H, since factor H bound to heparin-agarose and to sialic acid-bearing fetuinagarose, whereas C3b bound to neither under the same conditions. These observations suggest that occupation of a specific site on factor H by polyanions induces an increase in the C3b-H affinity, resulting in discrimination of host cells and tissues from alternative pathway-activating foreign cells.The alternative pathway of complement (AP) represents a natural defense system for recognition and destruction of foreign organisms in vertebrate species (1-4). It enhances phagocytosis and is cytolytic for many bacteria, parasites, and virus-infected cells and for some tumor cells. This relatively simple system is composed of only six plasma glycoproteins (C3 and factors B, D, H, I, and P) but recognizes a wide variety of foreign organisms without prior contact or memory. The molecular mechanism by which C3b and the regulatory system of complement discriminate (5) between human and foreign particles has yet to be fully described. As an approach to this problem, a fluid-phase model for the AP recognition event has been constructed (6, 7). This paper shows that the recognition process can be fully mimicked with soluble complexes.
The long pentraxin PTX3 is a multifunctional soluble molecule involved in inflammation and innate immunity. As an acute phase protein, PTX3 binds to the classical pathway complement protein C1q, limits tissue damage in inflammatory conditions by regulating apoptotic cell clearance, and plays a role in the phagocytosis of selected pathogens. This study was designed to investigate the interaction of PTX3 with factor H (FH), the main soluble alternative pathway regulatory protein. We report that PTX3 binds FH with an apparent Kd of 1.1 × 10−7 M, and define two binding sites for PTX3 on FH. The primary binding site is located on FH domains 19–20, which interact with the N-terminal domain of PTX3, while a secondary binding site on domain 7 binds the glycosylated PTX3 pentraxin domain. The FH Y402H polymorphism, which affects binding to the short pentraxin CRP, did not affect binding to PTX3. Surface-bound PTX3 enhances FH recruitment and iC3b deposition and PTX3-bound FH retains its activity as a cofactor for factor I-mediated C3b cleavage. Thus, our findings identify PTX3 as a unique FH ligand in that it can bind both of the two hot-spots of FH, namely SCR7 and SCR19–20 and indicate that PTX3 participates in the localization of functionally active FH.
Hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS) is a disease characterized by microangiopathic hemolytic anemia, thrombocytopenia, and acute renal failure. Recent studies have identified a factor H–associated form of HUS, caused by gene mutations that cluster in the C-terminal region of the complement regulator factor H. Here we report how three mutations (E1172Stop, R1210C, and R1215G; each of the latter two identified in three independent cases from different, unrelated families) affect protein function. All three mutations cause reduced binding to the central complement component C3b/C3d to heparin, as well as to endothelial cells. These defective features of the mutant factor H proteins explain progression of endothelial cell and microvascular damage in factor H–associated genetic HUS and indicate a protective role of factor H for tissue integrity during thrombus formation
Complement factor H (FH) is an important regulator of the alternative complement pathway. The Y402H polymorphism within the seventh short consensus repeat of FH was recently shown to be associated with age-related macular degeneration, the most common cause of irreversible blindness in the Western world. We examined the effects of this polymorphism on various FH functions. FH purified from sera of age-related macular degeneration patients homozygous for the FH402H variant showed a significantly reduced binding to C-reactive protein (CRP), an acute phase protein, as compared with FH derived from unaffected controls homozygous for the FH402Y variant. Strongly reduced binding to CRP was also observed with a recombinant fragment of FH (short consensus repeat 5–7) containing the same amino acid change. Because the interaction of CRP and FH promotes complement-mediated clearance of cellular debris in a noninflammatory fashion, we propose that the reduced binding of FH402H to CRP could lead to an impaired targeting of FH to cellular debris and a reduction in debris clearance and enhanced inflammation along the macular retinal pigmented epithelium-choroid interface in individuals with age-related macular degeneration.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
hi@scite.ai
334 Leonard St
Brooklyn, NY 11211
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.