Lee Aun Tan, Andrew C. Yang, Uday Kishore, Robert B. Sim. Interactions of complement proteins C1q and factor H with lipid A and Escherichia coli: further evidence that factor H regulates the classical complement pathway[J]. Protein&Cell, 2011, 2(4): 320-332. doi: 10.1007/s13238-011-1029-y
Citation: Lee Aun Tan, Andrew C. Yang, Uday Kishore, Robert B. Sim. Interactions of complement proteins C1q and factor H with lipid A and Escherichia coli: further evidence that factor H regulates the classical complement pathway[J]. Protein&Cell, 2011, 2(4): 320-332. doi: 10.1007/s13238-011-1029-y

Interactions of complement proteins C1q and factor H with lipid A and Escherichia coli: further evidence that factor H regulates the classical complement pathway

  • Proteins of the complement system are known to interact with many charged substances. We recently characterized binding of C1q and factor H to immobilized and liposomal anionic phospholipids. Factor H inhibited C1q binding to anionic phospholipids, suggesting a role for factor H in regulating activation of the complement classical pathway by anionic phospholipids. To extend this finding, we examined interactions of C1q and factor H with lipid A, a well-characterized activator of the classical pathway. We report that C1q and factor H both bind to immobilized lipid A, lipid A liposomes and intact Escherichia coli TG1. Factor H competes with C1q for binding to these targets. Furthermore, increasing the factor H:C1q molar ratio in serum diminished C4b fixation, indicating that factor H diminishes classical pathway activation. The recombinant forms of the Cterminal, globular heads of C1q A, B and C chains bound to lipid A and E. coli in a manner qualitatively similar to native C1q, confirming that C1q interacts with these targets via its globular head region. These observations reinforce our proposal that factor H has an additional complement regulatory role of down-regulating classical pathway activation in response to certain targets. This is distinct from its role as an alternative pathway downregulator. We suggest that under physiological conditions, factor H may serve as a downregulator of bacterially-driven inflammatory responses, thereby finetuning and balancing the inflammatory response in infections with Gram-negative bacteria.
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