| Literature DB >> 23227086 |
Saskia F Heeringa1, Clemens D Cohen.
Abstract
Inherited and acquired dysregulation of the complement alternative pathway plays an important role in multiple renal diseases. In recent years, the identification of disease-causing mutations and genetic variants in complement regulatory proteins has contributed significantly to our knowledge of the pathogenesis of complement associated glomerulopathies. In these diseases defective complement control leading to the deposition of activated complement products plays a key role. Consequently, complement-related glomerulopathies characterized by glomerular complement component 3 (C3) deposition in the absence of local immunoglobulin deposits are now collectively described by the term "C3 glomerulopathies." Therapeutic strategies for reestablishing complement regulation by either complement blockade with the anti-C5 monoclonal antibody eculizumab or plasma substitution have been successful in several cases of C3 glomerulopathies. However, further elucidation of the underlying defects in the alternative complement pathway is awaited to develop pathogenesis-specific therapies.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 23227086 PMCID: PMC3511829 DOI: 10.1155/2012/695131
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Dev Immunol ISSN: 1740-2522
Figure 1Dysregulation of the alternative complement cascade due to acquired or genetic factors leads to defective complement control causing a range of complement-associated glomerulopathies. C3 is cleaved to generate C3a and C3b. After binding of C3b to factor B, the complex is cleaved by factor D to form C3-convertase. The initial convertase constantly cleaves C3 at a low rate (referred to as “tick-over” of the alternative pathway). Binding of another C3b-fragment to C3-convertase creates a C5-convertase after which the pathway proceeds in the same manner as the classical pathway recruiting additional complement factors to ultimately form the membrane attack complex (MAC). The alternative pathway is strictly regulated by complement regulating proteins (listed in red). Mutations, genetic variations, or antibodies against complement regulating proteins or C3-convertase lead to abnormal C3-convertase activity. The subsequent deposition of activated complement products causes a range of complement-associated glomerulopathies. Abbreviations: C3; complement component 3, CFHR3; complement factor H related protein, AP; alternative pathway.
C3 glomerulopathies.
| Diseases | EM-findings | Alternative pathway abnormalities | Disease specific treatment options |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dense deposit disease | (i) Osmophilic wavy dense deposits within GBM, mesangial matrix, tubular BM | (i) Autoantibodies (C3Nef, FHAA, FBAA, C3-convertase AA) | (i) Infusion of fresh frozen plasma |
| C3 glomerulonephritis | (i) Mesangial, subendothelial, subepithelial and intramembranous deposits | (i) Mutations/genetic variations ( | (i) Eculizumab |
| CFHR5 nephropathy | (i) Mesangial, subendothelial, subepithelial deposits | (i) | (i) No treatment of proven efficacy |
| Familial C3 glomerulopathy | (i) MPGN type III | (i) Familial hybrid | (i) No treatment of proven efficacy |
Abbreviations: C3: complement component 3, CFHR5: complement factor H related protein 5, CFH: complement factor H, CFI: complement factor I, MCP: membrane cofactor protein, FHAA: factor H autoantibody, FBAA: factor B autoantibody, (G) BM; (glomerular) basement membrane, MCP: membrane cofactor protein.