C1 inhibitor prevents endotoxin shock via a direct interaction with lipopolysaccharide |
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Authors: | Liu Dongxu Cai Shenghe Gu Xiaogang Scafidi Jennifer Wu Xiao Davis Alvin E |
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Affiliation: | Center for Blood Research, Children's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, 800 Huntington Avenue, Boston, MA 02115, USA. |
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Abstract: | C1 inhibitor (C1INH) is beneficial in animal models of endotoxemia and sepsis. However, the mechanism(s) of C1INH protection remain(s) ill-defined. In this study, we demonstrated that both active C1INH and reactive center-cleaved, inactive C1INH protected mice from lethal Gram-negative endotoxemia. Both forms of C1INH blocked the LPS-binding protein-dependent binding of Salmonella typhimurium LPS to the murine macrophage cell line, RAW 264.7, and suppressed LPS-induced TNF-alpha mRNA expression. Inhibition of LPS binding to RAW 264.7 cells was reversed with anti-C1INH Ab and was more efficient when C1INH was incubated first with LPS rather than with the cells. C1INH also suppressed LPS-induced up-regulation of TNF-alpha mRNA in whole human blood. The interaction of C1INH with LPS was directly demonstrated both by ELISA and by nondenaturing PAGE, but deletion of the amino-terminal 97-aa residues abrogated this binding. Therefore, C1INH, in addition to its function as a serine protease inhibitor, has a novel anti-inflammatory function mediated via its heavily glycosylated amino-terminal non-serpin domain. |
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