| Literature DB >> 19005576 |
Anthony Courtois1, Christelle Simon-Colin, Claire Boisset, Christian Berthou, Eric Deslandes, Jean Guézennec, Anne Bordron.
Abstract
Many biological properties of algae have been found to have useful applications in human health, particularly in the fields of oncology and immunology. Floridoside, extracted from the red alga Mastocarpus stellatus, has a structure similar to the xenoantigen Gal alpha 1-3 Gal. This xenoantigen has been described to induce a high immune response in human xenografts and is mediated by natural anti-gal antibodies that activate the classical complement pathway. Based on this property, we analyzed the potential activities of floridoside on the immune system. We demonstrated that floridoside activates a complement cascade via the classical complement pathway, through the recruitment and activation of natural IgM. This algal molecule could represent an important step in the development of a potent new anticomplementary agent for use in therapeutic complement depletion.Entities:
Keywords: Alpha-galactosyl glycerol; complement system; immunomodulation; marine algae
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2008 PMID: 19005576 PMCID: PMC2579733 DOI: 10.3390/md20080019
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mar Drugs ISSN: 1660-3397 Impact factor: 5.118
Figure 1Chemical structure of floridoside.
Figure 2Floridoside activation of the complement system. Activation was measured by the capacity of NHS incubated with various quantities of floridoside to restore serum deficient or depleted in complement proteins C4 and C2, respectively. (A) Activation using a wide range of floridoside concentrations. (B) Close-up of (A) for floridoside quantities ≤10 μg. Each point represents the mean (± SE) determined from three to six trials.
Figure 3The three main pathways that activate the complement system.
Figure 4Quantity-response curves of floridoside activation of the complement system. Activation was measured by the capacity of NHS incubated with various quantities of floridoside on restoring serum deficient in complement proteins (C1q). Each point represents the mean (± SE) determined from three to six trials.
Figure 5C4d production in NHS incubated with floridoside determined by ELISA assays. Each point represents the mean determined from four trials.
Figure 6Evaluation of floridoside complement activation using NHS and umbilical serum (US). Experiments were performed using serum deficient in the C4 protein. Each point represents four trials analyzed using the Student’s t-test and ANOVA. The asterisk (*) represents significant differences (p<0.05) between NHS and US at a given quantity.
Figure 7Comparison between floridoside and α-Gal epitope in their capacity to activate the complement system. This experiment was performed using serum deficient in the C4 protein. Each point represents four trials analyzed using Student’s t-test and ANOVA. The asterisk (*) represents significant differences (p<0.05) between floridoside and α-Gal epitope at a given concentration.