Literature DB >> 10469960

Selective blockade of membrane attack complex formation during simulated extracorporeal circulation inhibits platelet but not leukocyte activation.

C S Rinder1, H M Rinder, M J Smith, J B Tracey, J Fitch, L Li, S A Rollins, B R Smith.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Complement activation is induced by cardiopulmonary bypass, and previous work found that late complement components (C5a, C5b-9) contribute to neutrophil and platelet activation during bypass. In the present study, we blocked C5b-9 formation during extracorporeal recirculation of whole blood to assess whether the membrane attack complex was responsible for both platelet and leukocyte activation.
METHODS: In a simulated extracorporeal model that activates complement (C3a and sC5b-9), platelets (CD62P expression, leukocyte-platelet conjugate formation), and leukocytes (increased CD11b expression and neutrophil elastase), we examined an anti-human C8 monoclonal antibody that inhibits C5b-9 generation for its effects on cellular activation.
RESULTS: Anti-C8 significantly inhibited sC5b-9 formation but did not block C3a generation. Anti-C8 also significantly inhibited the increase in platelet CD62P and monocyte-platelet conjugate formation seen with control circulation. Moreover, compared with control circulation, in which the number of circulating platelets fell by 45%, addition of anti-C8 completely preserved platelet counts. In contrast to blockade of both C5a and sC5b-9 during simulated extracorporeal circulation, neutrophil activation was not inhibited by anti-C8. However, circulating neutrophil and monocyte counts were preserved by addition of anti-C8 to the extracorporeal circuit.
CONCLUSIONS: The membrane attack complex, C5b-9, is the major complement determinant of platelet activation during extracorporeal circulation, whereas C5b-9 blockade has little effect on neutrophil activation. These data also suggest a role for platelet activation or C5b-9 (or both) in the loss of monocytes and neutrophils to the extracorporeal circuit.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 10469960     DOI: 10.1016/S0022-5223(99)70183-2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg        ISSN: 0022-5223            Impact factor:   5.209


  8 in total

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Review 2.  [Cardiopulmonary bypass in cardiac surgery].

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4.  Properdin-Mediated C5a Production Enhances Stable Binding of Platelets to Granulocytes in Human Whole Blood.

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7.  Implication of complement system and its regulators in Alzheimer's disease.

Authors:  Martin V Kolev; Marieta M Ruseva; Claire L Harris; B Paul Morgan; Rossen M Donev
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8.  Factor H C-Terminal Domains Are Critical for Regulation of Platelet/Granulocyte Aggregate Formation.

Authors:  Adam Z Blatt; Gurpanna Saggu; Claudio Cortes; Andrew P Herbert; David Kavanagh; Daniel Ricklin; John D Lambris; Viviana P Ferreira
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  8 in total

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