Literature DB >> 22944688

Protease-dependent mechanisms of complement evasion by bacterial pathogens.

Michal Potempa1, Jan Potempa.   

Abstract

The human immune system has evolved a variety of mechanisms for the primary task of neutralizing and eliminating microbial intruders. As the first line of defense, the complement system is responsible for rapid recognition and opsonization of bacteria, presentation to phagocytes and bacterial cell killing by direct lysis. All successful human pathogens have mechanisms of circumventing the antibacterial activity of the complement system and escaping this stage of the immune response. One of the ways in which pathogens achieve this is the deployment of proteases. Based on the increasing number of recent publications in this area, it appears that proteolytic inactivation of the antibacterial activities of the complement system is a common strategy of avoiding targeting by this arm of host innate immune defense. In this review, we focus on those bacteria that deploy proteases capable of degrading complement system components into non-functional fragments, thus impairing complement-dependent antibacterial activity and facilitating pathogen survival inside the host.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22944688      PMCID: PMC3488274          DOI: 10.1515/hsz-2012-0174

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biol Chem        ISSN: 1431-6730            Impact factor:   3.915


  152 in total

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