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Chapter 6 The Complement System. Complement System. Major effector branch of humoral immune system in vertebrates However, invertebrates possess proteins related to complement system Even sea urchins have complement. Functions of Complement. 7 Functional Categories:
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Chapter 6 The Complement System
Complement System • Major effector branch of humoral immune system in vertebrates • However, invertebrates possess proteins related to complement system • Even sea urchins have complement
7 Functional Categories: • Initiate complement components • Enzymatic mediators • Membrane binding (opsonins) • Inflammatory mediators • Membrane attack proteins • Complement receptor proteins • Regulatory proteins
Components of Complement • Soluble proteins and glycoproteins • Synthesized mainly by liver hepatocytes and other cell types • 5% of serum globulins • Circulate as inactive proenzymes – proteolytic cleavage removes inhibitory fragment and exposes active site
Components of Complement • Designated by numerals, letter symbols, or trivial names • Examples: C1-C9, factor D, homologous restriction factor • Peptide fragments made by activation • “a” for smaller fragment – C3a • “b” for larger fragment – C3b • Complexes with enzymatic activity have bar on top – C4b2a
Complement Activation • Early steps – resulting in C5 • Can occur by 3 pathways: • Classical • Alternative • Lectin • Final steps leading to membrane-attack complex (MAC) are identical in all 3 pathways
Classical Pathway • Antibody Dependent • Activated by Ag-Ab complex (most commonly IgM and IgG) • Early stages involve C1, C2, C3, and C4
Classical Pathway • What C1 looks like
Alternative Pathway • Antibody-Independent • Component of innate immune system • Early stages involve C3, factor B, factor D, and properdin • Initiated by cell surface constituents foreign to host • For example – Gram- and Gram+ bacteria
Lectin Pathway • Antibody-Independent • However, proceeds more like classical pathway • Uses C4 and C2 • Activated by binding of mannose-binding lectin (MBL) to mannose residues on glycoproteins or carbs on surface of microorganisms
Membrane Attack Complex (MAC) • Forms pores in cell membrane • Ions and small molecules can freely pass through pores • Cell cannot maintain osmotic stability
Regulation • Components are capable of attacking host cells • Components undergo spontaneous inactivation if they are not stabilized with other components • C3 convertase is major amplification step in all 3 pathways • Regulatory proteins are present that control C3 convertase
Biological Consequences of Complement Activation • Amplifies humoral response and causes it to be an effector response • Lyse cells • Participate in inflammatory response • Opsonization of antigen • Clearance of immune complexes
Cell Lysis • MAC and lyse broad spectrum of cells • Gram+ bacteria generally more resistant because of thick peptidoglycan • Some have developed ways to evade MAC
Mediating Inflammation • Cleavage products of complement components mediate inflammation • Smaller fragments bind to basophils and mast cells • C3a and C5a (anaphylatoxins) induce smooth muscle contraction and increase vascular permeability
Opsonization • C3b and C4b have opsonizing activity – cause phagocytosis
Viral Neutralization • Binding of antibody and complement to viruses blocks attachment to susceptible host cells
Clearing of Immune Complexes • Tissue damage can result from build up of immune complexes • C3b coats immune complexes • RBC have capability of binding C3b coated complexes and carrying them to liver and spleen to be cleared • Deficiencies with any of complement may result in improper binding of C3b and loss of clearing may occur
Introduction to Complement https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_5bj0oUrqDQ