| Literature DB >> 28671664 |
Xiaoguang Xue1, Jin Wu1, Daniel Ricklin2, Federico Forneris1, Patrizia Di Crescenzio2, Christoph Q Schmidt2,3, Joke Granneman1, Thomas H Sharp4, John D Lambris2, Piet Gros1.
Abstract
The complement system labels microbes and host debris for clearance. Degradation of surface-bound C3b is pivotal to direct immune responses and protect host cells. How the serine protease factor I (FI), assisted by regulators, cleaves either two or three distant peptide bonds in the CUB domain of C3b remains unclear. We present a crystal structure of C3b in complex with FI and regulator factor H (FH; domains 1-4 with 19-20). FI binds C3b-FH between FH domains 2 and 3 and a reoriented C3b C-terminal domain and docks onto the first scissile bond, while stabilizing its catalytic domain for proteolytic activity. One cleavage in C3b does not affect its overall structure, whereas two cleavages unfold CUB and dislodge the thioester-containing domain (TED), affecting binding of regulators and thereby determining the number of cleavages. These data explain how FI generates late-stage opsonins iC3b or C3dg in a context-dependent manner, to react to foreign, danger or healthy self signals.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28671664 PMCID: PMC5773341 DOI: 10.1038/nsmb.3427
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Struct Mol Biol ISSN: 1545-9985 Impact factor: 15.369