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Pig complement regulator factor H: molecular cloning and functional characterization
Authors:Guido?A.?Hegasy,Ute?Willhoeft,Sandra?A.?Majno,Harald?Seeberger,Peter?F.?Zipfel,Jens?Hellwage  author-information"  >  author-information__contact u-icon-before"  >  mailto:jens.hellwage@hki-jena.de"   title="  jens.hellwage@hki-jena.de"   itemprop="  email"   data-track="  click"   data-track-action="  Email author"   data-track-label="  "  >Email author
Affiliation:(1) Bernhard Nocht Institute for Tropical Medicine, Bernhard-Nocht-Strasse 74, 20359 Hamburg, Germany;(2) Hans Knoell Institute for Natural Products Research, Beutenbergstrasse 11a, 07745 Jena, Germany
Abstract:Complement is an efficient defense mechanism of innate immunity. Factor H is the central complement regulator of the alternative pathway, acting in the fluid-phase and on self surfaces. Pigs are considered a suitable source for xenotransplantation and thus several membrane-bound pig complement regulators with importance for the acute rejection phase have been investigated. However, pig fluid-phase regulators have not been described so far. We report the cloning, expression and functional characterization of pig factor H. After constructing a pig liver cDNA library, a full-length factor H cDNA was isolated and sequenced. The predicted protein is organized in 20 short consensus repeat (SCR) domains and has an overall identity of 62% to the human protein. For functional characterization, three deletion constructs of pig factor H were expressed in insect cells. Pig factor H construct SCR 1–4 has cofactor activity for factor I-mediated cleavage of human C3b, which is similar to the human regulator. In addition, this N-terminal construct binds to human C3b, while a construct consisting of SCR 15–20 showed a weaker binding to human C3b/C3d. Pig factor H has two major binding sites for heparin, as the two constructs representing SCR 1–7 and SCR 15–20 proteins, but not the SCR 1–4 protein, bind heparin. The C-terminal construct is able to bind to human endothelial cells, as assayed by FACS. We show that pig and human factor H share functional characteristics in complement regulation and cell surface binding. Possible consequences of using pig livers for xenotransplantation are discussed.The nucleotide sequence data reported are available in the EMBL database (accession number AJ278470)
Keywords:Complement regulation  C3b  Alternative pathway  Heparin  Xenotransplantation
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