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1.
The 65 kDa C8-binding protein or homologous restriction factor (C8bp/HRF) protects cells from complement (C)-mediated lysis by binding to C8 and abrogating lytic channel formation. Human C8bp/HRF is shown here to be immunologically related to human C8 and C9 and to murine lymphocyte poreforming protein (PFP, perforin). Polyclonal antibodies raised against purified C8, C9 and perforin react with C8bp/HRF. The antigenic epitopes shared by these four proteins are limited to cysteine-rich or disultide bridge-masked domains. Only complement proteins or perforin that have been disulfide-reduced elicit the production of cross-reactive antibodies when used as immunogens. Analogously, only C8bp/HRF that has been disulfide-reduced reacts with these antibodies. These results suggest that C8bp/HRF may belong to the complement/perforin supergene family. The function of homologous domains shared by these four proteins remains to be elucidated.  相似文献   

2.
CTL and NK cells produce a cytolytic pore-forming protein (perforin, cytolysin) localized in their cytoplasmic granules. These cytotoxic cells are resistant to killing mediated by other lymphocytes and by purified perforin. A membrane factor, known as homologous restriction factor (HRF), has been suggested to confer protection to different cell types against both C- and perforin-mediated lysis. The granules of human large granular lymphocytes have been reported to contain, in addition to perforin, a soluble HRF activity that can be eluted from anion-exchange columns at 115 mM NaCl. Here, we report that a soluble HRF activity is absent in the granules or the cytosol of murine CTL and human NK cells. Our data indicate that the inhibition attributed to HRF could be explained by exogenous EDTA added during granule fractionation. EDTA was shown to bind to Mono Q and to elute at 90 to 120 mM NaCl. A second perforin-inhibitory activity was also eluted from such a column. However, it was present in preparations obtained not only from CTL and NK cells, but also from some perforin-susceptible tumor cell lines, indicating that it has nonrestricted distribution and suggesting that it is probably irrelevant to the perforin-protection mechanism. Our results argue against a role for soluble granule HRF or other soluble factors in mediating resistance of cytotoxic lymphocytes against perforin-mediated lysis.  相似文献   

3.
The most complement (C)-sensitive type of erythrocytes (E) occurring in paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (type III PNH E) have previously been found to exhibit approximately twofold to fourfold greater lysis than normal human E when exposed to isolated human C5b6, C7, C8, and C9 (reactive lysis), in the absence of a known source of C3- or C5-convertases or fluid-phase C3. In further studies on the mechanism of this phenomenon, we now report that C5b6-dependent binding of 125I-C7 to two samples of PNH E (greater than 95% type III) is equal to that found with normal human E at each of several C5b6 inputs tested. Lysis developed by excess C8 and C9, however, was consistently greater for the PNH E. Thus, the exaggerated sensitivity of type III PNH E to reactive lysis cannot be explained by abnormally high uptake of C5b6 or C7 from the fluid phase. Rather, the data indicate that cell-bound C5b67 sites are converted to effective hemolytic sites with greater efficiency on type III PNH E than on normal human E, assuming that the distribution of cell-bound C7 throughout both cell populations is similar. In related studies we have addressed the proposal by other investigators that C3b putatively bound to PNH E in vivo might account for their increased sensitivity to reactive lysis in vitro, by analogy to prior observations on C3b-potentiated reactive lysis of sheep E. The latter hypothesis was made more appealing by the recent discovery that type III PNH E lack an integral membrane protein, decay-accelerating factor (DAF), which in normal E accelerates the decay of membrane-bound C3 convertases. Against this hypothesis, however, is our present finding that preincubation of PNH E with four different goat or rabbit polyclonal antibodies to human C3 failed to inhibit the subsequent reactive lysis of these cells. Under these same conditions, the C3b-dependent increment in reactive lysis of sheep EAC4b3b was abrogated by pretreatment with similar dilutions of these anti-C3 antibodies, generally in association with agglutination. Furthermore, sheep EAC4b3b displayed increased 125I-C7 binding in proportion to augmented lysis, in contrast to the findings with PNH E. Therefore, deficiency of DAF in type III PNH E does not adequately explain their supranormal sensitivity to reactive lysis unless DAF can modulate the terminal lytic steps by a mechanism distinct from its effect on C3 convertase decay. Alternatively, type III PNH E could have a more general abnormality in which DAF deficiency is one manifestation and increased sensitivity to reactive lysis is another.  相似文献   

4.
HRF20, a 20 kDa homologous restriction factor, is a membrane glycoprotein anchored via galactosyl phosphatidyl inositol. Its function is to protect cells from attack by homologous complement. Adsorption of purified HRF20 to Raji cells which have little, if any, of this factor increased their resistance to cytolysis by homologous complement. However, the same cells treated with HRF20 remained sensitive to cytotoxic attack by IL-2 activated lymphocytes (lymphokine activated killer cells; LAK cells). Since LAK cells are effector cells which release perforin, HRF20 does not appear to protect cells from the damage caused by perforin.  相似文献   

5.
20 KDa homologous restriction factor (HRF20) is a membrane glycoprotein which inhibits formation of membrane attack complexes of homologous complement. Erythrocytes from a patient who is completely deficient in HRF20 were readily hemolyzed by homologous complement activated by sucrose or by acidification as in paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH). After incubating PNH erythrocytes (PNH-E) with purified HRF20, the cells were analyzed by flow cytometry using a monoclonal antibody to HRF20 and shown to have the antigen absorbed. These PNH-E acquired resistance to hemolysis by homologous complement suggesting that HRF20 may be successfully used for treatment of these patients.  相似文献   

6.
The mechanism whereby cytolytic lymphocytes protect themselves from killing mediated by their own cytotoxic protein, perforin, was studied. By using a competition assay, we demonstrated that the resistance of cells to perforin-mediated cytolysis is inversely correlated with their ability to absorb perforin, with tumor cells and noncytotoxic lymphocytes that are susceptible to perforin-mediated lysis being able to absorb perforin from the supernatant much better than CTL. The evidence implies that there is molecule on cytolytic lymphocytes that interferes with perforin-binding activity, resulting in the inability of perforin to lyse these cells. The molecule is most likely a surface protein or complex of proteins because its activity decreases after CTL treatment with the proteolytic enzymes trypsin and papain, and the activity can be recovered by incubation of the treated CTL cells at 37 degrees C for 6 h. The recovery can be blocked by emetine, cycloheximide, and actinomycin D, inhibitors of protein and RNA/DNA synthesis. The protein contains carbohydrate groups that play an important role in the function of the protein, as indicated by the fact that inhibition of glycosylation by tunicamycin and cleavage of sialic acid from the protein with neuraminidase result in a significant increase of perforin binding to CTL. Cross-linkage of CTL membrane proteins with glutaraldehyde and formaldehyde and blockage of the functional domains of the protein with an antiserum against CTL also inhibit the activity of this protein. Temperature-dependence studies that allow for a dissociation of the binding and pore-forming stages of perforin-mediated hemolysis suggest that the protective protein interferes at the perforin-binding stage.  相似文献   

7.
Damage to autologous tissue by complement is limited by several widely distributed membrane-associated glycoproteins which restrict the action of the complement in homologous species. These include decay accelerating factor (DAF), membrane cofactor protein (MCP) and 20 kDa homologous restriction factor (HRF20,CD59). Using immunohistochemical techniques, we examined the localization of these proteins in the centra] nervous system (CNS) and peripheral nervous system (PNS) using non-neurological human nervous tissue since some complement components have been demonstrated to be synthesized in the CNS. There was no evidence of parenchymal staining by anti-DAF or anti-MCP antibodies in either type of tissue except for the staining of the endothelium in capillaries. On the other hand, anti-HRF20 antibody clearly stained myelinated axons in the CNS as well as Schwann cells in the PNS. In addition, we detected positive staining by anti-DAF antibody in the PNS of a Paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH) patient who is genetically deficient in HRF20.  相似文献   

8.
Inability of the membrane attack complex of C (C5b-9) to efficiently lyse E from the same species has been attributed to one or more membrane-associated proteins that are collectively called homologous restriction factors. These include a 65,000 Mr protein referred to as the C8 binding protein or homologous restriction factor and a 20,000 Mr protein referred to as P-18, HRF20, CD59 Ag, or MIRL. Both are found on nucleated cells as well as E and both protect against complement-mediated lysis by interfering with C8 and/or C9 function within C5b-9. The exact mechanism by which these factors restrict activity is unknown but studies with purified C8 binding protein suggest they may interact specifically with the gamma subunit of C8. To determine directly if gamma is the target of restriction factors, a derivative of human C8 lacking this subunit was evaluated for its potential to lyse homologous cells. This derivative (C8') was previously shown to be functionally equivalent to normal C8 in a heterologous sheep E system. Here, it is compared to normal C8 by using human E as target cells. Results indicate no difference between the ability of C8 and C8' to incorporate into HuEAC1-7, to mediate subsequent C9 binding and to promote hemolysis. Thus, the presence or absence of gamma has no effect on homologous restriction of C5b-9, therefore gamma cannot be the primary target of homologous restriction factors.  相似文献   

9.
Distinct restriction of complement- and cell-mediated lysis   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Complement- and cell-mediated killing utilize related effector proteins (C8/C9 and perforin, respectively), suggesting that proteins which protect cells against complement- and cell-mediated attack may also be similar. In homologous complement-mediated killing two protective proteins, which are anchored to the cell membrane by phosphatidylinositol glycan (PIG) tails, are known. To study whether similar PIG-tailed proteins protect against lymphocyte-mediated killing, nucleated cell lines with a mutation in the biosynthesis of the PIG anchor were used. It was found that PIG-tailed membrane proteins restrict homologous complement-mediated lysis but not three different types of cell-mediated killing or lysis by purified perforin. Furthermore, E from patients with an acquired defect in PIG tail biosynthesis did not differ from normal E in sensitivity to antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity, in spite of their increased sensitivity to human C8 and C9.  相似文献   

10.
Natural killer (NK) cells kill a target cell by secreting perforin into the lytic immunological synapse, a specialized interface formed between the NK cell and its target. Perforin creates pores in target cell membranes allowing delivery of proapoptotic enzymes. Despite the fact that secreted perforin is in close range to both the NK and target cell membranes, the NK cell typically survives while the target cell does not. How NK cells preferentially avoid death during the secretion of perforin via the degranulation of their perforin-containing organelles (lytic granules) is perplexing. Here, we demonstrate that NK cells are protected from perforin-mediated autolysis by densely packed and highly ordered presynaptic lipid membranes, which increase packing upon synapse formation. When treated with 7-ketocholesterol, lipid packing is reduced in NK cells making them susceptible to perforin-mediated lysis after degranulation. Using high-resolution imaging and lipidomics, we identified lytic granules themselves as having endogenously densely packed lipid membranes. During degranulation, lytic granule–cell membrane fusion thereby further augments presynaptic membrane packing, enhancing membrane protection at the specific sites where NK cells would face maximum concentrations of secreted perforin. Additionally, we found that an aggressive breast cancer cell line is perforin resistant and evades NK cell–mediated killing owing to a densely packed postsynaptic membrane. By disrupting membrane packing, these cells were switched to an NK-susceptible state, which could suggest strategies for improving cytotoxic cell-based cancer therapies. Thus, lipid membranes serve an unexpected role in NK cell functionality protecting them from autolysis, while degranulation allows for the inherent lytic granule membrane properties to create local ordered lipid “shields” against self-destruction.

Natural killer cells mediate largely unidirectional potent cytotoxicity against diseased cells while sparing themselves. The authors show that the NK cell membrane contains and focuses lipids of high density which shield against self-destruction, and a similar densely packed postsynaptic membrane is responsible for the perforin resistance and NK cell-mediated killing evasion of an aggressive breast cancer cell line.  相似文献   

11.
A soluble form of homologous restriction factor (HRF-U) was isolated from normal human urine. With respect to m.w. (65,000) and immunoblotting characteristics, it resembled membrane HRF (HRF-M) that had been isolated from human E membranes. The protein exhibited limited cross-reactivity with the channel-forming proteins of C and cytotoxic lymphocytes. It inhibited reactive lysis of E by human C5b-9. Inhibition occurred at the attachment stage of C5b-7 to target cells, rather than at the C8 or C9 stage of membrane attack complex assembly which is inhibited by HRF-M. In this respect, HRF-U acts analogously to S protein of serum, but no immunochemical relationship between these two proteins was detected. HRF-U might be derived from the soluble HRF detected in cytoplasmic granules of killer lymphocytes.  相似文献   

12.
Perforin lytic activity is controlled by calreticulin   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
The components within cytotoxic lymphocyte granules are responsible for a significant fraction of T and NK cell-mediated death. Perforin is stored in these granules together with calreticulin. Calreticulin has long been recognized as a chaperone protein of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and is the only resident ER protein to be found in the cytotoxic granules. Here we implicate a role for calreticulin in killing and report that it controls osmotic lysis mediated by purified perforin. Calreticulin, at a concentration of 2.2 x 10-7 M, completely blocked perforin-mediated lysis. Inhibition was stable and held over 5 h. Recombinant calreticulin, at a concentration of 8. 8 x 10-7 M, also blocked lysis, indicating the inhibition was due to calreticulin and not a copurifying protein in the native calreticulin preparations. Using calreticulin domain fragments (expressed as GST fusion proteins), we found inhibitory activity in the high-capacity calcium-binding C-domain, which does not bind perforin. The N- or P-domains, which can bind perforin, were unable to block lysis. The inhibition of lysis was independent of granzyme inactivation or the ability of calreticulin to sequester calcium. Our data indicate that calreticulin regulation of perforin-mediated lysis probably occurs without direct interaction with perforin. We propose a novel model in which calreticulin stabilizes membranes to prevent polyperforin pore formation.  相似文献   

13.
Recently, a protein isolated from the membrane of human E, the so-called C8 binding protein (C8bp), has been described. C8bp is characterized as a 65-kDa protein that binds to C8 and inhibits the C5b-9-mediated lysis in a homologous system. In the present study, membranes of peripheral blood cells were tested for the presence of C8bp by SDS-PAGE and immunoblotting. In all cells a protein band reacting with anti-C8bp was seen, the Mr, however, was only about 50 kDa. To further analyze the 50-kDa protein, we isolated the protein by phenol-water extraction and isoelectric focusing from papain-treated platelets. The isolated protein behaved similar to the E-derived C8bp: it inhibited the lysis of model target cells by C5b-9. To examine the function of C8bp in platelets, we tested platelets from patients suffering from paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH). These platelets were deficient in C8bp, being in accordance with their higher lytic susceptibility in vitro. In response to sublytic C5b-9 doses, the PNH platelets released considerably more serotonin and thromboxane B2 than normal platelets. By addition of purified C8bp, the thromboxane B2 release was suppressed, indicating that C8bp not only restricts the lytic complement attack, but also regulates the C5b-9-mediated stimulation of target cells. Thus, lack of C8bp might not only result in enhanced hemolysis, but also in enhanced stimulation of platelets, which in turn might contribute to the thrombotic complications seen in some PNH-type III patients.  相似文献   

14.
E from individuals with the Inab blood group phenotype have an isolated deficiency of decay accelerating factor (DAF, CD55). DAF is a glycosyl phosphatidylinositol anchored membrane protein that inhibits activation of both the classical and alternative pathways of complement. Deficiency of DAF from the E of paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH) is thought to contribute to their greater sensitivity to complement-mediated lysis. Unlike PNH E, however, Inab cells are not susceptible to acidified serum lysis, a process that is mediated through activation of the alternative pathway. This observation led us to hypothesize that membrane constituents other than DAF control susceptibility to acidified serum lysis. To investigate this hypothesis, Inab E were incubated in acidified serum, and hemolysis and C3 deposition (as a measure of alternative pathway activation) were quantitated. C3 deposition of Inab cells was approximately 20 times greater than normal, however, hemolysis was not observed. Inab E expressed a normal amount of membrane inhibitor of reactive lysis (MIRL, CD59), a glycosyl phosphatidylinositol anchored protein that is also deficient in PNH. When MIRL function was blocked with antibody, C3 deposition markedly increased, and 100% of the Inab cells hemolyzed in acidified serum. These studies demonstrate that susceptibility to acidified serum lysis is controlled primarily by MIRL, and that in addition to its regulatory affect on the membrane attack complex, MIRL also modulates the activity of the C3 convertase of the alternative pathway by a mechanism that remains to be determined.  相似文献   

15.
A mAb, 1F5, has the ability to cause hemolysis by human serum of human E treated with neuraminidase via the alternative C pathway. By Western blotting, this mAb reacts with a glycoprotein having a molecular mass of 20 kDa (1F5Ag). 1F5Ag was isolated from human E by affinity chromatography with mAb-coupled Sepharose. Purified 1F5Ag was then adsorbed to guinea pig E rendering them resistant to human C attack by both the classical and the alternative pathways. Furthermore, experiments with isolated C components revealed that 1F5Ag interferes with both homologous human C8 and C9 in the terminal stage of the C reaction, whereas it has little effect on hemolysis by rabbit C8 and C9. Therefore, 1F5Ag can be called HRF20, which stands for homologous restriction factor of 20 kDa.  相似文献   

16.
Species-restricted lysis of complement refers to the relative inefficiency of complement to lyse cells from the homologous species. Restriction occurs at least at the steps involving C3/C5 convertase formation and the C9 insertion phase of the complement cascade, and is presumed to be mediated by inhibitory factors in the target cell membrane. In this study, we have examined whether decay accelerating factor (DAF), a membrane protein known to modulate C3/C5 convertase activities on cell surfaces, acts as a regulatory protein in species-restricted lysis of human erythrocyte (E). The role of DAF was assessed in homologous lysis by the classic pathway, in reactive lysis, and in lytic steps requiring C8 and C9. The results indicated that DAF participated in regulating C3/C5 deposition on the surface of homologous E, but had no effect on homologous restriction in reactive lysis and in the reaction of C8 and C9 with antibody-sensitized E C1-7. Treatment of E with pronase or with dithiothreitol (DTT) abolished the restricting effect of homologous C8/C9, indicating that species-restricted lysis by C5b-9 involves membrane factor(s) sensitive to pronase and DTT.  相似文献   

17.
When whole serum C is activated by cobra venom factor complexes (CoFBb), paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH) III E (the most C-sensitive type) are hemolyzed, but normal and PNH II E (the intermediately sensitive type) are not. Previous studies have shown that after exposure to CoFBb and serum, PNH III E bind relatively large amounts of the trimolecular C complex, C5b67, whereas normal and PNH II E bind virtually none. In the studies reported herein, we have observed that when normal and PNH III E are incubated with isolated C5, C6, and 125I-C7 in the presence CoFBb, the normal E bind more C5b-7 than the PNH cells. When C7-deficient serum is included in the reaction mixture, however, the PNH E are once again observed to bind much greater amounts of C5b-7. These observations suggest that plasma and membrane factors act in concert to restrict the assembly of the trimolecular C5b-7 complex on human E. PNH III E appear to be deficient in the membrane component of this inhibitory system.  相似文献   

18.
Paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH) is an acquired hemolytic anemia in which affected erythrocytes (E) are abnormally sensitive to lysis by autologous complement. Affected E from patients with PNH (PNH-E) are deficient in an E membrane regulatory protein of complement, decay-accelerating factor (DAF). Because a functional defect in a second membrane regulatory protein of complement, CR1 (C3b receptor), has also been hypothesized, severely affected PNH-E (type III PNH-E) were tested for abnormalities in CR1 by four methods. E from two patients with 100% type III PNH-E had 3201 and 6783 sites per cell for binding of 125I-labeled rabbit polyclonal F(ab')2 anti-CR1. These values fall within the normal range of CR1 antigenic sites per cell (1267 to 7915, mean = 5,014 +/- 155 SEM) established by assaying the E from 113 healthy donors. The Ka of CR1 on type III PNH-E for 125I-labeled C3b dimer was 2.06 X 10(7) M-1, and the Ka values for the binding of the same ligand to the E from two healthy individuals were 2.45 X 10(7) M-1 and 1.58 X 10(7) M-1. In an assay designed to measure the capacity of human E (Eh) to accelerate the decay of the classical C3 convertase deposited on 1 X 10(7) bystander sheep E (EAC1gp,4bh,2agp), the half-life (t 1/2) of this convertase was diminished from 18.1 min (range 15.2 to 22.9) to 8.1 min (range 7.4 to 8.5) by the addition of 1 X 10(7) normal Eh, to 6.2 min by 100% type III PNH-E, and to 7.5 min by Eh pretreated with an IgG fraction of human antiserum directed against the D antigen of the Rh system. In contrast, Eh (t 1/2 = 7.4) pretreated with a saturating dose of F(ab')2 anti-CR1, and CR1-deficient Eh (less than 10 CR1 molecules/E) from a patient with systemic lupus erythematosus, showed a loss of convertase decay-accelerating capacity to t 1/2 = 11.6 and t 1/2 = 12.4, respectively. Type III PNH-E pretreated with anti-CR1 demonstrated a total loss of their decay-accelerating capacity (t 1/2 = 19.9). In an assay of I cofactor activity, soluble C3b was rapidly converted to iC3b by purified I plus Eh or type III PNH-E, whereas CR1-deficient Eh exhibited less than 5% the I cofactor activity of normal Eh.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

19.
As human E (HuE) treated with neuraminidase (Neu) are resistant to hemolysis by human serum but are readily lysed by heterologous serum via the alternative C pathway, we attempted to produce mAb which might modify Neu-treated HuE (Neu-HuE) so as to render them sensitive to homologous C. A hybridoma, clone -1F5, was obtained by screening for antibody which caused hemolysis of Neu-HuE by human serum via the alternative C pathway. We have shown that this antibody (1F5) of IgG1 isotype blocks the action of a 20-kDa membrane inhibitor capable of interfering with the terminal step in the homologous C cascade. The antigenic molecule can be termed HRF20, which stands for homologous restriction factor (HRF) with m.w. 20,000, because its function is essentially the same as that of HRF (68,000) reported by others.  相似文献   

20.
Cytotoxic T lymphocytes secrete a pore-forming cytolysin, perforin, that damages membranes of target cells. They also ligate Fas receptors on target cells and provoke apoptotic death. A20 (B lymphoma) and P815 (mastocytoma) cell lines were examined for their susceptibility to perforin-mediated lysis and to Fas-induced apoptosis after blockade of the cell cycle at the G1/S interface. Cells were arrested at the G1/S interface by inhibition of DNA synthesis with thymidine or aphidicolin. Subsequently, the treated cells were incubated either with CTL cytotoxic granules or the Fas-specific monoclonal antibody Jo-2. We show that arrest of the cell cycle at the G1/S interface markedly reduced the susceptibility of target cells to perforin-mediated lysis. In contrast, growth arrest with thymidine or aphidicolin increased susceptibility of A20 and P815 cells to Fas-mediated apoptosis. Susceptibility to lysis by intact CTLs was not affected significantly by blockade of target cells with aphidicolin or thymidine. When cells surviving exposure to perforin-containing granules were isolated on Ficoll density gradients and cell-cycle profiles were examined by flow cytometry, the ratio of G1 to G2cells increased among the survivors exposed to granules in contrast to controls incubated with buffer alone. The data suggest that cells in G1 phase of the cell cycle are less susceptible to the perforin pathway than cells in G2and S phases but are more susceptible to the Fas pathway. J. Cell. Biochem. 69:425–435, 1998. © 1998 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

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