| Literature DB >> 28572805 |
Abstract
Human-pathogenic microbes possess various means to avoid destruction by our immune system. These include interactions with the host complement system that may facilitate pathogen entry into cells and tissues, expression of molecules that defuse the effector complement components and complexes, and acquisition of host complement inhibitors to downregulate complement activity on the surface of the pathogen. A growing number of pathogenic microorganisms have acquired the ability to bind the complement inhibitor factor H (FH) from body fluids and thus hijack its host protecting function. In addition to FH, binding of FH-related (FHR) proteins was also demonstrated for several microbes. Initial studies assumed that these proteins are complement inhibitors similar to FH. However, recent evidence suggests that FHR proteins may rather enhance complement activation both directly and also by competing with the inhibitor FH for binding to certain ligands and surfaces. This mini review focuses on the role of the main alternative pathway regulator FH in host-pathogen interactions, as well as on the emerging role of the FHR proteins as enhancers of complement activation.Entities:
Keywords: complement deregulation; complement evasion; factor H; factor H-related; microbial virulence; opsonization
Year: 2017 PMID: 28572805 PMCID: PMC5435753 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2017.00571
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Complement pathways and the human factor H (FH) protein family. (A) Schematic overview of the major complement activation and regulation pathways. Molecules acting as complement inhibitors are shown in red. (B) The five human FH-related (FHR) proteins retained domains homologous to complement control protein domains 6–9 and 18–20 of FH (showed by vertical alignment). Colors indicate domains identical between FH and FHRs; light shades indicate high sequence similarity (>80% identity) but not complete identity. The domains marked green are closely related to each other but only distantly to FH and mediate dimerization of FHR-1, FHR-2, and FHR-5. Functional sites in FH are shown by horizontal lines. FH-like protein 1 (FHL-1) is a splice variant of FH.
Figure 2Role of the human factor H (FH) protein family in microbial immune evasion. (A) In addition to its role as plasma complement inhibitor, FH recognizes and binds to host surfaces and protects them from complement attack. Several microbes exploit this mechanism and recruit FH to their surface in order to escape from the complement system. FH-related (FHR) proteins may bind to certain host ligands or altered host surfaces that are exposed during inflammation or tissue damage (such as pentraxins, extracellular matrix proteins, or oxidative modifications of lipids) and displace FH, resulting in increased opsonization. FHRs may act as decoys and compete with FH for binding to microbial proteins. For example, FHR-3 was described to inhibit binding of FH to fHbp of Neisseria meningitidis. (B) FH was described to have additional functions. By simultaneously binding to certain microbes and receptors (such as CR3) on host cells, it may facilitate uptake of the microbe by immune cells and modulate cell activation, or facilitate entry of microbes into epithelial cells (left panel). FH was also shown to inhibit binding of C1q to apoptotic cells and E. coli and thus may modulate classical pathway activation and opsonization (right panel).