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1.
A human E membrane protein that inhibits lysis by the purified human C5b-9 proteins was isolated and characterized. After final purification, the protein migrated as an 18- to 20-kDa band by SDS-PAGE. Elution from gel slices and functional assay after SDS-PAGE (nonreduced) confirmed that all C5b-9 inhibitory activity of the purified protein resided in the 18- to 20-kDa band. Phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C digestion of the purified protein abolished 50% of its C5b-9 inhibitory activity, and removed approximately 15% of the protein from human E. Western blots of normal and paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria E revealed an absence of the 18- to 20-kDa protein in the paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria E cells. The identity of this E protein with leukocyte Ag CD59 (P18, HRF20) was confirmed immunochemically and by N-terminal amino acid sequence analysis. A blocking antibody raised against the purified protein reacted with a single 18- to 20-kDa band on Western blots of human erythrocyte membranes. Prior incubation of human E with the F(ab) of this antibody increased subsequent lysis by the purified human C5b-9 proteins. Potentiation of C5b-9-mediated lysis was observed when erythrocytes were preincubated with this blocking antibody before C5b-9 assembly was initiated, or, when this antibody was added after 30 min, 0 degrees C incubation of C5b-8-treated E with C9. Chicken E incubated with purified CD59 were used to further characterize the mechanism of its C-inhibitory activity. Preincorporation of CD59 into these cells inhibited lysis by C5b-9, regardless of whether CD59 was added before or after assembly of the C5b-8 complex. When incorporated into the membrane, CD59 inhibited binding of 125I-C9 to membrane C5b-8 and reduced the extent of formation of SDS-resistant C9 polymer. The inhibitory effect of CD59 on 125I-C9 incorporation was most pronounced at near-saturating input of C9 (to C5b-8). By contrast, CD59 did not inhibit either C5b67 deposition onto the cell surface, or, binding of 125I-C8 to preassembled membrane C5b67. Taken together, these data suggest that CD59 exerts its C-inhibitory activity by limiting incorporation of multiple C9 into the membrane C5b-9 complex.  相似文献   

2.
Transbilayer migration of membrane phospholipid arising from membrane insertion of the terminal human complement proteins has been investigated. Asymmetric vesicles containing pyrene-labeled phosphatidylcholine (pyrenePC) concentrated in the inner monolayer were prepared by outer monolayer exchange between pyrenePC-containing large unilamellar vesicles and excess (unlabeled) small unilamellar vesicles, using bovine liver phosphatidylcholine-specific exchange protein. After depletion of pyrenePC from the outer monolayer, the asymmetric large unilamellar vesicles were isolated by gel filtration and exposed to the purified C5b-9 proteins at 37 degrees C. Transbilayer exchange of phospholipid between inner and outer monolayers during C5b-9 assembly was monitored by changes in pyrene excimer and monomer fluorescence. Membrane deposition of the C5b67 complex (by incubation with C5b6 + C7) caused no change in pyrenePC fluorescence. Addition of C8 to the C5b67 vesicles resulted in a dose-dependent decrease in the excimer/monomer ratio. This change was observed both in the presence and absence of complement C9. No change in fluorescence was observed for control vesicles exposed to C8 (in the absence of membrane C5b67), or upon C5b-9 addition to vesicles containing pyrenePC symmetrically distributed between inner and outer monolayers. These data suggest that a transbilayer exchange of phospholipid between inner and outer monolayers is initiated upon C8 binding to C5b67. The fluorescence data were analyzed according to a "random walk" model for excimer formation developed for the case where pyrenePC is asymmetrically distributed between lipid bilayers. Based on this analysis, we estimate that a net transbilayer migration of approximately 1% of total membrane phospholipid is initiated upon C8 binding to C5b67. The potential significance of this transbilayer exchange of membrane phospholipid to the biological activity of the terminal complement proteins is considered.  相似文献   

3.
Membrane attack by serum complement normally results in the formation of C5b-9 complexes that are heterogeneous with respect to their C9 content. We here report that an apparently homogeneous population of C5b-9 complexes can be generated through treatment of C5b-7-laden sheep erythrocytes with C8 and C9 for 60 min at 0 degree C. Experiments performed by using radioiodinated C8 and C9 components have indicated that binding of C8 to these target cells is essentially temperature independent. In contrast, when a surplus of C9 molecules is offered to C5b-8 cells, an approximately fourfold to 4.5-fold higher number of C9 molecules become cell bound at 37 degrees C as opposed to 0 degree C. C5b-9 complexes isolated from target membranes treated with C9 at 0 degree C contain no polymerized C9 and do not exhibit the ring structure characteristic of the classical complement lesion. Nevertheless, these complexes generate stable transmembrane channels and cause hemolysis at 37 degrees C. The pores have been sized to 1 to 3 nm effective diameter by osmotic protection experiments. SDS-PAGE of the isolated complexes indicates an average stoichiometry of only one molecule C9 bound per C5b-8 complex. The results show that oligomerization of C9 with formation of ring lesions is not a basic requirement for the generation of stable transmembrane complement pores in sheep erythrocytes. They indirectly support the contention that terminal complement components other than C9 contribute to the intramembrane domains of C5b-9 pores.  相似文献   

4.
Cells resist death induced by the complement membrane attack complex (MAC, C5b-9) by removal of the MAC from their surface by an outward and/or inward vesiculation. To gain an insight into the route of MAC removal, human C9 was tagged with Alexa Fluor 488 and traced within live cells. Tagged C9-AF488 was active in lysis of erythrocytes and K562 cells. Upon treatment of K562 cells with antibody and human serum containing C9-AF488, C9-AF488 containing MAC bound to the cells. Within 5-10 min, the cells started shedding C5b-9-loaded vesicles (0.05-1 mum) by outward vesiculation. Concomitantly, C9-AF488 entered the cells and accumulated in a perinuclear, late recycling compartment, co-localized with endocytosed transferrin-Texas Red. Similar results were obtained with fixed cells in which the MAC was labeled with antibodies directed to a C5b-9 neoepitope. Inhibition of protein kinase C reduced endocytosis of C5b-9. Kinetic analysis demonstrated that peripheral, trypsin-sensitive C5b-9 was cleared from cells at a slower rate relative to fully inserted, trypsin-resistant C5b-9. MAC formation is controlled by CD59, a ubiquitously expressed membrane complement regulator. Analysis at a cell population level showed that the amount of C5b-9-AF488 bound to K562 cells after complement activation was highly heterogeneous and inversely correlated with the CD59 level of expression. Efficient C9-AF488 vesiculation was observed in cells expressing low CD59 levels, suggesting that the protective impact of MAC elimination by vesiculation increases as the level of expression of CD59 decreases.  相似文献   

5.
The erythrocyte membrane inhibitor of the human terminal complement proteins, surface antigen CD59, has previously been shown to enter into a detergent-resistant complex with either the membrane-bound complex of C5b-8 or C5b-9 (Meri, S., Morgan, B. P., Davies, A., Daniels, R. H., Olavesen, M. G., Waldmann, H. and Lachmann, P. J. (1990) Immunology 71, 1-9; Rollins, S. A., Zhao, J., Ninomiya, H., and Sims, P. J. (1991) J. Immunol, 146, 2345-2351). In order to further define the interactions that underlie the complement-inhibitory function of CD59, we have examined the binding interactions between 125I-CD59 and the isolated components of human complement membrane attack complex, C5b6, C7, C8, and C9. By density gradient analysis, we were unable to detect interaction of 125I-CD59 with any of these isolated complement components in solution. Specific binding of 125I-CD59 to C8 and C9 was detected when these human complement proteins were adsorbed to either plastic or to nitrocellulose, suggesting that a conformational change that accompanies surface adsorption exposes a CD59-binding site that is normally buried in these serum proteins. The binding of 125I-CD59 to plastic-adsorbed C8 and C9 was saturable and competed by excess unlabeled CD59, with half-maximal binding observed at 125I-CD59 concentrations of 80 and 36 nM, respectively. No specific binding of 125I-CD59 was detected for surface-adsorbed human C5b6 or C7 nor was such binding observed for C8 or C9 isolated from rabbit serum. Binding of CD59 to human C8 and C9 was not mediated by the phospholipid moiety of CD59, implying association by protein-protein interaction. In order to further define the binding sites for CD59, ligand blotting with 125I-CD59 was performed after separation of C8 into its noncovalently associated subunits (C8 alpha-gamma and C8 beta) and after alpha-thrombin digestion of C9. These experiments revealed specific and saturable binding of 125I-CD59 to C8 alpha-gamma subunit (half-maximal binding at 75 nM), but not to C8 beta, and specific and saturable binding to the 37-kDa fragment (C9b) of thrombin-cleaved C9 (half-maximal binding at 35 nM), but not to the 25-kDa C9a fragment. Partial reduction of C8 alpha-gamma revealed that only C8 alpha polypeptide exhibited affinity for CD59, and no specific binding to the C8 gamma chain was detected.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

6.
Polymerization of C9 occurs spontaneously or can be induced by the tetramolecular complex C5b-8. Spontaneous C9 (0.15 mg/ml) polymerization required more than 3 days at 37 degrees C. In the presence of C5b-8, C9 polymerization was complete within 10 min. The molar C9:C5b-8 ratio determined the extent of tubular poly C9 formation by C5b-8-bearing phospholipid vesicles. When this ratio was 9:1 or 12:1, 72% of complex-bound C9 was present as SDS resistant tubular poly C9 (Mr = 1.1 X 10(6]. At lower C9:C5b-8 ratios, poly C9 was bound primarily in nontubular form. Tubular poly C9, as part of C5b-9, could also be generated on rabbit erythrocytes by using whole human serum as a complement source. At limiting serum concentration (molar C9 to C8 ratio approximately 2), no SDS-resistant tubular poly C9 was detected. At high serum concentration or when using serum that was supplemented with C9, up to 40% of the C9 was SDS-resistant tubular poly C9, and the rest was poly C9, which was incompletely polymerized. It is suggested that the C5b-8 complex acts as an accelerator of C9 polymerization, and that its relative concentration to C9 determines the ultrastructure of the C5b-9 complex.  相似文献   

7.
We have visualized by freeze-etch electron microscopy the macromolecular complexes of complement, C5b-8 and C5b-9, respectively, assembled on synthetic phospholipid bilayers. These complexes were formed sequentially by using purified human complement components C5b-6 followed by C7, C8, and C9. Complexes of C5b-8 were observed on the external surface (ES) of vesicles as 12-nm particles that tended to form polydisperse aggregates. The aggregates were sometimes of a regular chainlike structure containing varying numbers of paired subunits. Etching of vesicles containing C5b-9 complexes revealed on the ES large rings of approximately 27-nm outer diameter. One or two knobs usually were attached to the perimeter of the rings. Splitting of the membrane resulted in partitioning of the C5b-9 with the outer leaflet. Thus, round holes of approximately 17-nm diameter were present in the protoplasmic face (PF), and raised circular stumps of a matching size were present on the exoplasmic face (EF) of C5b-9 vesicles. C5b-9 complexes were frequently localized in regions of the lowest lipid order. That is, in micrographs of the EF and ES, single C5b-9 complexes were located where the ripples of the P beta' phase bend or reach a dead end, and linear arrays of C5b-9 complexes outlined disclination-like structures in the lattice; the holes in the PF mirrored this distribution. The membrane immediately surrounding C5b-9 rings was often sunk inwardly over an area much larger than that of the ring itself.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
Human beta-endorphin (beta H-EP) is demonstrated to bind to the "preterminal" SC5b-7 and SC5b-8 complexes and to the terminal SC5b-9 complex of human complement. Detailed binding studies revealed saturability, reversibility and structural specificity of the beta H-EP interaction with high or low affinity non-opiate binding sites on SC5b-7 and SC5b-9 complexes. The high affinity binding sites seem to be located predominantly on C5b, C6 or C7 subunits of the complexes.  相似文献   

9.
The effect of immune activation of the serum complement system on the secretory response of human endothelial cells was examined. Exposure of antibody sensitized cultured umbilical vein endothelial cells to human serum resulted in secretion of very high molecular weight multimers of von Willebrand factor which coincided with new surface expression of the intracellular granule membrane protein GMP-140. This response required complement activation through deposition of C5b-9 and was not observed with cells exposed to antibody plus C8-deficient serum or to membrane C5b-8 (in the absence of C9). This C5b-9-induced secretion was observed with minimal cell lysis, as assessed by the release of lactic dehydrogenase. Delayed addition of C8 and C9 to cells exposed to antibody plus C8-deficient serum revealed a rapid decay of membrane C8 binding sites accompanied by loss of the secretory response, suggesting a process of removal or inactivation of nascent C5b67 complexes deposited on the endothelial surface. Membrane assembly of C5b-9 complexes caused an increase in endothelial cytosolic [Ca2+], due to influx across the plasma membrane. This C5b-9-dependent increase in cytosolic [Ca2+] and concomitant von Willebrand factor secretion were both abolished by removal of external calcium. In addition to being linked to the level of external Ca2+, the C5b-9-induced secretory response was partially inhibited by the protein kinase inhibitor, sphingosine. The capacity of the C5b-9 proteins to stimulate endothelial cells to secrete a platelet adhesive protein provides one mechanism for increased platelet deposition at sites of inflammation, and suggests the potential for other functional changes in endothelium exposed to C5b-9 during intravascular complement activation.  相似文献   

10.
P J Sims  T Wiedmer 《Biochemistry》1984,23(14):3260-3267
The fluorescence self-quenching by energy transfer of FITC-C9, a fluoresceinated derivative of human complement protein C9 [Sims, P.J. (1984) Biochemistry (preceding paper in this issue)], has been used to monitor the kinetics of C9 polymerization induced by the membrane-associated complex of complement proteins C5b-8. Time-based measurements of the fluorescence change observed during incubation of FITC-C9 with C5b-8-treated sheep red blood cell ghost membranes at various temperatures revealed that C9 polymerization induced by the C5b-8 proteins exhibits a temperature dependence similar to that previously reported for the complement-mediated hemolysis of these cells, with an Arrhenius activation energy for FITC-C9 polymerization of 13.3 +/- 3.2 kcal mol-1 (mean +/- 2 SD). Similar measurements obtained with C5b-8-treated unilamellar vesicles composed of either egg yolk phosphatidylcholine (egg PC), dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC), or dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) revealed activation energies of between 20 and 25 kcal mol-1 for FITC-C9 polymerization by C5b-8 bound to these membranes. Temperature-dependent rates of C9 polymerization were observed to be largely unaffected by the phase state of membrane lipid in the target C5b-8 vesicles. The significance of these observations of the mechanism of C9 activation of membrane insertion is considered.  相似文献   

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