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1.
Nonimmune activation of the first component of complement (C1) by cardiolipin (CL) vesicles present specific features which were not demonstrated on immune complexes. CL vesicles which activate C1 in the presence of C1-inhibitor (C1-INH) were found to bind C1s in the absence of C1r, and to induce a specific C1r-independent cleavage of C1q-bound C1s. Therefore, several known natural nonimmune activators were analyzed by comparing their ability to activate C1 in the presence of C1-INH and to mediate a C1r-independent cleavage of C1s. Freshly isolated human heart mitochondria (HHM) activated C1 only in the absence of C1-INH. However, mitoplasts derived from HHM (HHMP) activated C1 regardless of the presence of C1-INH, and induced a specific cleavage of C1q-bound C1s. The same pattern was observed in the case of smooth E. coli and a semi-rough E. coli strain. DNA, known to activate C1 only in the absence of C1-INH, does not induce C1s cleavage in the absence of C1r. Thus, nonimmune activators can be classified into two distinct categories. "Strong" activators, such as CL vesicles, HHMP, or the semi-rough E. coli strain J5 can activate C1 in the presence of C1-INH. By using C1qs2 as a probe, they exhibit a specific, C1r-independent cleavage of C1s. C1s-binding to C1q is a critical factor for the activation process in this group. In the case of "weak" activators, such as E. coli smooth strains, DNA, or HHM, no C1s-binding to activator-bound C1q was detected, and C1r-independent C1s cleavage and C1 activation in the presence of C1-INH were not observed. As in the case of immune complexes, C1r activation appears to play a key role in the C1 activation by "weak" activators.  相似文献   

2.
Lipid vesicles containing phospholipids known to be present in substantial amounts in mitochondrial membranes were tested for their capacity to activate C1. Among them, only cardiolipin (CL) was highly efficient in C1 activation; no such effect was observed with phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylethanolamine, or phosphatidylinositol. CL was shown to bind specifically C1q, because only unlabeled C1q competed with 125I-C1q for binding to CL. The requirement for C1q was confirmed by the finding that only fully reconstituted macromolecular C1, containing C1q, was activated by CL. The specificity of CL-induced activation of C1 was also demonstrated by introducing adriamycin, an agent known to interact with CL. Whereas adriamycin did not decrease C1 activation induced by immune complexes, it abrogated C1 activation by CL. The latter was shown to be a strong nonimmune activator of C1, because C1-INH did not inhibit CL-induced activation. When the concentration of CL in vesicles was decreased in the presence of phosphatidylcholine, C1 activation was detected only above a critical level of 35 mol% CL, compatible with a minimal density or clustering of CL molecules in the plane of the membrane. Moreover, C1 activation by CL was modulated by the addition of cholesterol. The threshold of CL required for C1 activation was lowered by the incorporation of more than 35 mol% cholesterol into the vesicles. These results show that CL incorporated into liposomes can be a potent nonimmune activator of C1. The negatively charged phosphate groups in CL are likely candidates for Clq-binding.  相似文献   

3.
C1r was unable to cleave and activate proenzyme C1s unless first incubated at 37 degrees C in the absence of calcium before the addition of C1s. The acquisition of ability to activate C1s was associated with, and paralleled by, cleavage of each of the two noncovalently bonded 95,000 dalton chains of the molecule into disulfide linked subunits of 60,000 and 35,000 daltons, respectively. Thus, C1r is converted from an inactive form into an enzyme, C1r, able to cleave and activate C1s by proteolytic cleavage in marked analogy to the activation of several other complement enzymes. Trypsin was also found to cleave C1r but at a different site, and its action did not lead to C1r activation. C1r activation was inhibited by calcium, polyanethol sulfonate, C1 inactivator, and DFP but not by a battery of other protease inhibitors. C1 inactivator inhibited C1r by forming a complex with C1r via sites located on the light chain of the molecule. In other studies, cleavage of C1r was not accelerated by the addition of C1r ot C1s. C1r and C1r were found to have the same m.w., sedimentation coefficient, and diffusion coefficients. They differed, however, in charge with C1r migrating as a Beta-globulin and C1r as a gammaglobulin on electrophoresis in agarose. The amino acid composition of C1r and of each of the two polypeptide chains of Clr was determined. Both chains contained carbohydrate. Proteolytic cleavage of the C1r molecule was found to occur on addition of aggregated IgG to a mixture of C1q, C1r, and C1s in the presence of calcium. Neither C1q, C1s nor aggregated IgG alone, not C1r nor C1s induced C1r cleavage. Liquoid, an inhibitor of C1 activation, inhibited C1r cleavage. Thus, proteolytic cleavage of C1r appears to be a biologically meaningful event occurring during the activation of C1.  相似文献   

4.
The first component of human complement was separated from C1-INH by sucrose linear gradient ultracentrifugation. Activation of C1 was studied in the absence and presence of immune complexes; activation was monitored by SDS-PAGE and Western blot. When the partially purified native C1 preparation was incubated at 37 degrees C without immune complexes, activated C1s appeared after 30 min in the case of eightfold dilution with respect to the original serum, and after 45 min with 32-fold dilution. Kinetics of appearance of activated C1r was the same as that of activated C1s. From the following results, we concluded that spontaneous activation may be partially due to proteolytic enzymes contaminating the preparation: 1) a nonspecific protease inhibitor, PMSF, completely inhibited spontaneous activation but did not inhibit the activation of C1 by immune complexes; 2) alpha 2-macroglobulin partially inhibited spontaneous activation, and 3) although spontaneous activation in the absence of PMSF was relatively slow, activated C1 accelerated spontaneous activation that was completely blocked by C1-INH. In contrast to spontaneous activation, the partially purified native C1 was rapidly activated by immune complexes: within 5 min almost all C1 was activated by rabbit IgG anti-human IgM-human IgM complexes. These results support conclusions derived from activation studies when using native C1 and hemolytic assays, and do not support those derived from the activation studies with reconstituted C1 and SDS-PAGE analysis. We suggest that the contradictions can be resolved if one assumes that C1 activation can be both an intra- and intermolecular process; which process dominates is determined by the state of C1 and by experimental conditions.  相似文献   

5.
Antibody-independent C1 activation by E. coli   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Antibody-independent interactions of C1 with several E. coli strains were examined. Purified C1 was directly activated by the semi-rough mutant E. coli J-5, its parental wild-type strain, E. coli 0111:B4, and two clinical isolates, E. coli (P) and E. coli (A), in the absence of C1 inhibitor. E. coli J-5 activated C1 about 10-fold more rapidly and bound approximately threefold more C1 than the other strains. E. coli J-5, but not the other strains, also bound C1s2, provided that the subcomponent was offered to the bacteria in the presence of C1q and calcium; such binding was thus independent of the presence or absence of C1r2. After C1 activation in the absence of C1 inhibitor, activated C1s spontaneously dissociated from E. coli 0111:B4, (P), and (A), but remained associated with E. coli J-5. The regulatory protein C1 inhibitor prevented C1 activation by the weaker activators, E. coli strains 0111:B4, (P), and (A), but had no effect on C1 activation by E. coli J-5. Although C1 inhibitor thus failed to modulate C1 activation by E. coli J-5, it did block the enzymatic activity of activated C1 bound to this strain. Analyses of the molecular processes involved revealed differences with other systems. In the presence of C1 inhibitor, the C1s subunit of C1 activated by E. coli J-5 underwent further cleavage with the release into the supernatant of C1s fragments and complexes of C1 inhibitor with light chain fragments. Such fragments were not disulfide-linked to the remainder of the C1s molecule. The bulk of the heavy chain remained adherent to the surface of E. coli J-5. This finding documents the presence of a binding site for activated C1s on the surface of E. coli J-5 and localizes this site to the heavy chain. These studies thus indicate that several E. coli strains are direct C1 activators. Furthermore, E. coli J-5 provides another example of a direct C1 activator having binding sites not only for C1q but also for dimeric C1s. The studies also show that there are multiple properties of particles which determine the ability to activate C1, the rate of activation, the possibility of regulation of the activation process by C1 inhibitor, and the fate of activated C1.  相似文献   

6.
We have demonstrated that immune complexes turn over C1, i.e., limiting quantities of immune complexes activate an excess of C1. This was readily apparent in a system of purified C1 and C1-inhibitor (C1-In) but not in normal human serum (NHS). The following results indicate that C3 and C4 are the serum factors responsible for the inhibition of C1 turnover by immune complexes. 1) In a purified protein system composed of C1 and C1-In at pH 7.5, ionic strength 0.14 M, doses of immune complexes that activated all the C1 in 60 min at 37 degrees C yielded no detectable C1 activation when C2, C3, and C4 were also present. All proteins were at their physiologic concentrations. Activation was quantified by SDS-PAGE analysis and hemolytic titration 2) In order to inactivate C3 and C4, NHS was treated with 50 mM methylamine (MeAm) for 15 min at 37 degrees C, after which the MeAm was removed by dialysis. The activities of C1, C2, and C1-In were unaffected by this treatment. Doses of immune complexes that consumed no C1 in NHS, consumed all the C1 in MeAm-treated NHS (MeAm-NHS). 3) Reconstitution of MeAm-NHS with physiologic concentrations of C3 and C4 rendered the serum again resistant to excessive C1 consumption by immune complexes. Immune complexes used in these studies included EA-IgG, EA-IgM, tetanus-human anti-tetanus, and aggregated human IgG. There appeared to be specificity to the inhibition reaction since C4 by itself could inhibit C1 consumption by EA-IgM, whereas the presence of C3 was also required to control EA-IgG. Finally, N-acetyl-L-tyrosine was added to NHS at a final concentration of 30 mM. This nucleophile did not interact with native C3 or C4, nor did it directly activate C1. However, upon the addition of low doses of immune complexes, acetyl tyrosine did yield uncontrolled C1 activation, presumably by binding nascent C3b and C4b and thereby blocking their attachment to the immune complexes. We conclude that in NHS there is a mechanism of feedback inhibition by which nascent C3b and C4b inhibit C1 turnover by immune complexes. This mechanism of control might be physiologically important in that it prevents excessive complement activation by low concentrations of immune complexes.  相似文献   

7.
Spontaneous activation of C1r in the presence of EDTA was examined by a Western blot. Partially purified native C1r was prepared by ultracentrifugation of fresh serum in 10 to 30% sucrose gradient; final concentration of C1r was one-sixth of the original serum. C1(-)-INH was not detectable by a single radial immunodiffusion (less than 0.5% of serum). The results demonstrated that 1) the rate of spontaneous activation of C1r was slow (less than 10% in 30 min); 2) it was concentration-dependent; 3) it was enhanced by activated C1r; and 4) it was almost completely suppressed by serine protease inhibitors up to 1 h. These results were inconsistent with an intramolecular autoactivation model of C1r in the fluid phase and suggested intermolecular activation by contaminating protease or activated C1r.  相似文献   

8.
Two monoclonal antibodies directed against C1q, and their (Fab)2 and Fab fragments, were used to study the mechanism of C1 activation. Monoclonal antibody 2A10, an IgG2a, was digested by pepsin to yield fully immunoreactive (Fab')2. Monoclonal antibody 1H11, an IgG1, was digested by papain to yield fully immunoreactive, bivalent (Fab)2. Previously 1H11 had been shown to bind to the C1q "heads," whereas 2A10 bound to stalks. Activation of C1 was followed by the cleavage of 125I-C1s in the presence of C1 inhibitor (C1-Inh) at 37 degrees C. Spontaneous activation was minimal at inhibitor concentrations above 0.4 micron (1.3 X physiologic inhibitor concentration); all results were corrected for the spontaneous activation background. Heat-aggregated IgG activated completely in this system and was taken as 100% activation. Monoclonal antibody 2A10 caused precipitation of C1 and slow activation; neither the (Fab')2 nor the Fab' derived from 2A10-caused activation. Probably, aggregates of intact 2A10 and C1 were serving as immune complexes to activate other molecules of C1. In contrast, both 1H11 and its (Fab)2 activated completely and stoichiometrically; that is, maximal activation was achieved at a ratio of one C1q head to one antibody combining site. The monovalent Fab derived from 1H11 bound well to C1q, but no activation of C1 was observed. Thus, bivalent binding of this head-binding monoclonal is required for C1 activation, but not the presence of the antibody Fc portion. Neither 1H11 nor its (Fab)2 fragments caused C1 precipitation; however, the 1H11 did form complexes composed of two C1q cross-linked by multiple 1H11, which were visualized by electron microscopy. The presence of these dimeric complexes correlated well with activation. A model for C1 activation is proposed in which two C1q subcomponents are held together by multiple (Fab)2 bridging C1q heads. The model is roughly analogous to touching opposing pairs of fingers and thumb tips, the two hands representing the two C1q, forming a cage. C1-Inh, which probably binds to C1r through the open end of the C1 cone, is too long asymmetric to be included within the cage. Thus, according to this model, the dimers of C1 are released from the inhibitory action of C1-Inh, and activation proceeds spontaneously and rapidly at 37 degrees C.  相似文献   

9.
Serum mannan-binding protein (S-MBP), a lectin specific for mannose and N-acetylglucosamine, was documented to activate complement through the classical pathway. In this study, we examined the mechanism that initiates this activation. By a passive hemolysis test using sheep erythrocytes coated with yeast mannan, the activation of complement by human S-MBP was shown to proceed in the absence of C1q. The following binding studies using 125I-labeled C1r2s2 and C1s indicated that the activated form of C1r2s2 bound to S-MBP located on the surface of the cells with high affinity. The binding of C1s to the cell-bound S-MBP require the presence of C1r, suggesting that C1r2s2 binds to S-MBP through C1r. The activation of C1s from a proenzyme to a protease was mediated by cell-bound S-MBP in the presence of C1r and the activated protease remained associated with the cells and was not released into the medium. The activation of complement with S-MBP was a solid phase event and did not proceed in a fluid phase. On the basis of these results, it was concluded that S-MBP is responsible for the initiation of carbohydrate-mediated complement activation as C1q does in immune complex-mediated complement activation.  相似文献   

10.
The structural basis for neutrophil inactivation of C1 inhibitor.   总被引:8,自引:2,他引:6       下载免费PDF全文
Limited proteolysis of C1 inhibitor (C1-INH) by neutrophil elastase, Pseudomonas elastase and snake venoms resulted in initial cleavage within the molecule's N-terminus followed by further cleavage within the molecule's C-terminally placed reactive centre. N-Terminal proteolysis occurred at peptide bonds 14-15, 36-37 and 40-41. This had no effect on either the inhibitory activity or the heat-stability of C1-INH. Proteolysis within the reactive centre occurred at peptide bonds 439-440, 440-441, 441-442 and 442-443. Cleavage at any one of these sites inactivated C1-INH and conferred enhanced heat-stability upon a previously heat-labile molecule. Released neutrophil proteinases also cleaved and inactivated C1-INH, suggesting that they may physiologically regulate C1-INH during inflammatory episodes.  相似文献   

11.
Inositolsphingolipid phospholipase C (Isc1p) is the Saccharomyces cerevisiae member of the extended family of neutral sphingomyelinases that regulates the generation of bioactive ceramides. Recently, we reported that Isc1p is post-translationally activated in the post-diauxic phase of growth and that it localizes to mitochondria (Vaena de Avalos, S., Okamoto, Y., and Hannun, Y. A. (2004) J. Biol. Chem. 279, 11537-11545). In this study the in vivo mechanisms of activation and function of Isc1p were investigated. Deletion of ISC1 resulted in markedly lower growth in non-fermentable carbon sources. Interestingly, the growth defect of isc1Delta strains resembled that of pgs1Delta strains, lacking the committed step in the synthesis of phosphatidylglycerol (PG) and cardiolipin (CL), which were shown to activate Isc1p in vitro. Therefore, the role of Pgs1p in activation of Isc1p in vivo was investigated. The results showed that in the pgs1Delta strain, the growth-dependent activation of Isc1p was impaired as was the ISC1-dependent increase in the levels of phytoceramide during the post-diauxic phase, demonstrating that the activation of Isc1p in vivo is dependent on PGS1 and on the mitochondrial phospholipids PG/CL. Mechanistically, loss of Isc1p resulted in lower levels of mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase subunits cox3p and cox4p, previously established targets of both PG and CL (Ostrander, D. B., Zhang, M., Mileykovskaya, E., Rho, M., and Dowhan, W. (2001) J. Biol. Chem. 276, 25262-25272), thus suggesting that Isc1p mediates at least some functions downstream of PG/CL. This study provides the first evidence for the mechanism of in vivo activation and function of Isc1p. A model with endogenous PG/CL as the in vivo activator of Isc1p is proposed.  相似文献   

12.
Mannan-binding lectin (MBL) and C1q activate the complement cascade via attached serine proteases. The proteases C1r and C1s were initially discovered in a complex with C1q, whereas the MBL-associated serine proteases 1 and 2 (MASP-1 and -2) were discovered in a complex with MBL. There is controversy as to whether MBL can utilize C1r and C1s or, inversely, whether C1q can utilize MASP-1 and 2. Serum deficient in C1r produced no complement activation in IgG-coated microwells, whereas activation was seen in mannan-coated microwells. In serum, C1r and C1s were found to be associated only with C1q, whereas MASP-1, MASP-2, and a third protein, MAp19 (19-kDa MBL-associated protein), were found to be associated only with MBL. The bulk of MASP-1 and MAp19 was found in association with each other and was not bound to MBL or MASP-2. The interactions of MASP-1, MASP-2, and MAp19 with MBL differ from those of C1r and C1s with C1q in that both high salt concentrations and calcium chelation (EDTA) are required to fully dissociate the MASPs or MAp19 from MBL. In the presence of calcium, most of the MASP-1, MASP-2, and MAp19 emerged on gel-permeation chromatography as large complexes that were not associated with MBL, whereas in the presence of EDTA most of these components formed smaller complexes. Over 95% of the total MASPs and MAp19 found in serum are not complexed with MBL.  相似文献   

13.
It is well known that activated Factor XII (FXIIa) and kallikrein are rapidly inactivated in plasma as a result of reaction with endogenous inhibitors. The purpose of this may be to prevent uncontrolled deleterious spreading and activation of target zymogens. Both FXII and the complex plasma prekallikrein/high molecular mass kininogen become activated when they bind, in a Zn2+-dependent manner, to receptors on human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC). The C1-esterase inhibitor (C1-INH) is by far the most efficient inhibitor of FXIIa. In the present study it has been investigated whether binding of FXIIa to HUVEC might offer protection against inactivation by C1-INH. It appeared that the relative amidolytic activity of purified FXIIa bound to the surface of HUVEC decreased according to the concentration of C1-INH in medium; however, the decrease was smaller than that measured for inactivation of FXIIa in solution. The secondary rate constant for the inactivation was 3-10-fold lower for cell-bound than for soluble FXIIa. The inactivation was found to be caused by C1-INH binding to cell-bound FXIIa. Accordingly, the amidolytic activity of saturated amounts of cell-bound FXIIa was reduced in the presence of C1-INH and was theoretically nonexistent at physiological C1-INH concentrations. Amidolytic activity was, however, present on HUVEC incubated with plasma indicating that the endogenous C1-INH did not completely abolish the activity of FXIIa generated during the incubation period. This supports the hypothesis that binding to endothelial cells protects the activated FXII against inactivation by its major endogenous inhibitor. Hence, the function of FXII may be localized at cellular surfaces.  相似文献   

14.
C1q binding and C1 activation by various isolated cellular membranes   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Cellular and subcellular membranes obtained from heart, liver, and brain tissue from human, baboon, bovine, rabbit, and rat bound highly purified, radioiodinated human C1q with a high affinity (Ka = 10(8) to 10(10) M-1). The majority of these membrane preparations were able to activate fully assembled C1 as evidenced by the conversion of 125I-C1s, incorporated into C1 complexes, to 125I-C1s. C1 activation by baboon heart mitochondrial membranes required an intact C1 complex and appeared to be mediated by the binding of the C1q subcomponent in that excess C1q completely blocked C1 activation. Several experiments suggested that the heart mitochondrial membrane binding site for C1q is an integral component of the mitochondrial membrane and that C1q interacted with the membrane binding site through its globular head regions. It is suggested that the binding of C1q and the activation of C1 by cellular and subcellular membranes may be involved in the initiation and/or enhancement of the inflammatory process after acute tissue damage.  相似文献   

15.
Immune complex-induced C1 activation and fluid phase C1 autoactivation have been compared in order to elucidate the immune complex role in the C1 activation process. Kinetic analyses revealed that immune complex-bound C1 activates seven times faster than fluid phase C1 spontaneously activates. The rate of spontaneous C1 activation increased after decreasing the solution ionic strength. In fact at one-half physiologic ionic strength (i.e., 0.08 M), the kinetics of spontaneous C1 activation were indistinguishable from the kinetics of activation of immune complex-bound C1 at physiologic ionic strength. The enhanced fluid phase C1 activation at low ionic strength resulted neither from C1 nor C1q aggregation, nor from selective effects on the C1r2S2 subunit; however, at the reduced ionic strength, the C1 association constant (defined for C1q + C1r2S2 in equilibrium C1qr2S2) did increase to 2.3 X 10(8) M-1, which is equal to that for C1 bound to an immune complex at physiologic ionic strength. Therefore, C1 can spontaneously activate in the fluid phase as rapidly as C1 on an immune complex when the strength of interaction between C1q and C1r2S2 is the same in both systems. In conclusion, under physiologic conditions, C1q and C1r2S2 are two weakly interacting proteins. Immune complexes provide a site for the assembly of a stable C1 complex, in which C1q and C1r2S2 remain associated long enough for C1q to activate C1r2S2. Thus, immune complexes enhance the intrinsic C1 autoactivation process by strengthening the association of C1q with C1r2S2.  相似文献   

16.
J Blasi  E R Chapman  S Yamasaki  T Binz  H Niemann    R Jahn 《The EMBO journal》1993,12(12):4821-4828
The anaerobic bacterium Clostridium botulinum produces several related neurotoxins that block exocytosis of synaptic vesicles in nerve terminals and that are responsible for the clinical manifestations of botulism. Recently, it was reported that botulinum neurotoxin type B as well as tetanus toxin act as zinc-dependent proteases that specifically cleave synaptobrevin, a membrane protein of synaptic vesicles (Link et al., Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun., 189, 1017-1023; Schiavo et al., Nature, 359, 832-835). Here we report that inhibition of neurotransmitter release by botulinum neurotoxin type C1 was associated with the proteolysis of HPC-1 (= syntaxin), a membrane protein present in axonal and synaptic membranes. Breakdown of HPC-1/syntaxin was selective since no other protein degradation was detectable. In vitro studies showed that the breakdown was due to a direct interaction between HPC-1/syntaxin and the toxin light chain which acts as a metallo-endoprotease. Toxin-induced cleavage resulted in the generation of a soluble fragment of HPC-1/syntaxin that is 2-4 kDa smaller than the native protein. When HPC-1/syntaxin was translated in vitro, cleavage occurred only when translation was performed in the presence of microsomes, although a full-length product was obtained in the absence of membranes. However, susceptibility to toxin cleavage was restored when the product of membrane-free translation was subsequently incorporated into artificial proteoliposomes. In addition, a translated form of HPC-1/syntaxin, which lacked the putative transmembrane domain at the C-terminus, was soluble and resistant to toxin action. We conclude that HPC-1/syntaxin is involved in exocytotic membrane fusion.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

17.
The activation of bovine protein C by factor Xa   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
A complex composed of factor Xa and phospholipid vesicles assembled in the presence of calcium ions catalyzes a discrete cleavage of the heavy chain of bovine protein C that is indistinguishable from that produced by thrombin as judged by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. This cleavage generates an active site capable of hydrolyzing small substrates and inactivating factor Va function in the prothrombinase complex. Activation of protein C by factor Xa requires both calcium ions and phospholipid vesicles and proceeds at a rate an order of magnitude greater than that observed for alpha-thrombin in solution. gamma-Carboxyglutamic acid-domainless protein C is not activated by factor Xa, consistent with the requirement for phospholipid and distinguishing this reaction from protein C activation by thrombin. Thrombomodulin serves as a cofactor for the factor Xa-catalyzed reaction, forming a 1:1 complex with factor Xa (apparent Kd = 5.7 X 10(-10) M) and stimulating the saturated rate of protein C activation by factor Xa (kcat = 149 min-1) to levels comparable with the thrombin-thrombomodulin complex. Protein C activation by factor Xa is not inhibited by the specific thrombin inhibitor dansyl-N-(3-ethyl-1,5-pentanediyl)amide but is inhibited by antithrombin III, tripeptide-chloromethyl ketones, and the monoclonal antibody alpha-BFX-2b that is highly specific for factor Xa. These data indicate that thrombomodulin is promiscuous in its role as a cofactor and suggest the existence of an alternative pathway for protein C activation in vivo.  相似文献   

18.
A simple test-system has been developed for the first time in order to detect the ability of effectors (lipoplexes) to activate the complement system in an antibody-independent manner to serve as acceptors of nascent C4b and to inhibit formation of the key enzyme of complement, C3-convertase. The effect of plasmid DNA (pCMV-SPORT-LacZ), negatively charged cardiolipin (CL), neutral phosphatidylcholine (PC) vesicles and their lipoplexes, on the complement system was studied using the method developed. It was revealed that PC vesicles did not affect the complement system, while CL vesicles manifested low activation. The influence of plasmid DNA and its lipoplex based on PC liposomes as well on the complement system was very low. PC/LacZ lipoplex (143 microg/ml) acted on the complement system like 5.36 microg/ml heat aggregated IgG (agg) (the level of no pathological ruptures), whereas CL/LacZ lipoplex (143 microg/ml) acted similar to 10.7 microg/ml IgG (agg). Thus, weak activation of the complement system with CL lipoplex, and even weaker for the PC lipoplex testified to the use of neutral and positively charged lipoplexes preferably in gene therapy protocols. The technique can also be used for testing the influence of injectable gene therapy vectors on the complement system.  相似文献   

19.
Plasma kallikrein and factor XIa circulate bound to high molecular weight kininogen, and such binding has been reported to protect these enzymes from inactivation by their respective inhibitors. However, this observation is controversial, and the effect of high molecular weight kininogen upon the interaction between kallikrein and C1 inhibitor (C1-INH) has been questioned. We have re-evaluated this reaction and studied the rate of inhibition of kallikrein by C1-INH in the presence and absence of high molecular weight kininogen. The second-order rate constant of inhibition of kallikrein by C1-INH was unaffected by saturating concentrations of high molecular weight kininogen. Our results suggest that although high molecular weight kininogen clearly augments the rate of formation of kallikrein and other enzymes of the contact activation pathway, it has no effect on the rate of enzyme inhibition by C1-INH.  相似文献   

20.
An affinity sorbent comprising macroporous glass coated with the polymer with the polymer with immobilized immunoglobulin IgG was used for the isolation from human serum of the first component of the complement and for its separation into subcomponents C1r, C1s and C1q by the one-step procedure. Serum C1 was quantitatively bound to the sorbent at 0 degrees C. The unbound part of the serum can be used as a R1 reagent for determining the hemolytic activity of C1. After activation of bound C1 by heating (30 degrees C, 40 min) the activated subcomponent C1r is eluted from the sorbent. Stepwise elution with EDTA at pH 7.4 or with EDTA + 1 M NaCl at pH 8.5 results in a selective and quantitative elution of the activated subcomponent C1s and subcomponent C1q. Stepwise elution of C1 subcomponents from the affinity sorbent after activation reflects the process of C1 breakdown following its activation on immune complexes.  相似文献   

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