| Literature DB >> 28748184 |
Andrea Angeletti1,2, Joselyn Reyes-Bahamonde1, Paolo Cravedi1, Kirk N Campbell1.
Abstract
The complement system is part of the innate immune response that plays important roles in protecting the host from foreign pathogens. The complement components and relative fragment deposition have long been recognized to be strongly involved also in the pathogenesis of autoantibody-related kidney glomerulopathies, leading to direct glomerular injury and recruitment of infiltrating inflammation pathways. More recently, unregulated complement activation has been shown to be associated with progression of non-antibody-mediated kidney diseases, including focal segmental glomerulosclerosis, C3 glomerular disease, thrombotic microangiopathies, or general fibrosis generation in progressive chronic kidney diseases. Some of the specific mechanisms associated with complement activation in these diseases were recently clarified, showing a dominant role of alternative activation pathway. Over the last decade, a growing number of anticomplement agents have been developed, and some of them are being approved for clinical use or already in use. Therefore, anticomplement therapies represent a realistic choice of therapeutic approaches for complement-related diseases. Herein, we review the complement system activation, regulatory mechanisms, their involvement in non-antibody-mediated glomerular diseases, and the recent advances in complement-targeting agents as potential therapeutic strategies.Entities:
Keywords: complement system; fibrosis; focal segmental glomerulosclerosis; glomerular disease; thrombotic microangiopathy
Year: 2017 PMID: 28748184 PMCID: PMC5506082 DOI: 10.3389/fmed.2017.00099
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Med (Lausanne) ISSN: 2296-858X
Figure 1Schematic representation of complement activation pathways and complement-targeting agents. C1q,r,s cross-linking of antibodies activates the classical pathway. Mannose-associated serine proteases (MASPs) bind to mannose motifs expressed on bacteria to activate complement via the mannose-binding lectin (MBL) pathway. Subsequent cleavage and assembly of C2 and C4 proteins form the C3 convertase. The spontaneous hydrolysis of C3 on cell surfaces leads to the alternative pathway (AP): C3 convertase dependent on factor B (fB), factor D (fD), and properdin. The resultant C3 convertases can continuously cleave C3; however, after they are generated, the AP C3 convertase dominates in amplifying production of C3b (green looping arrow). C3 convertases cleave C3 into C3a and C3b. C3b permits the formation of C5 convertase. C3b has further roles in opsonization and immune complex clearance. C5b, in conjunction with C6–C9, allows formation of the membrane attack complex (MAC) and subsequent pathogen lysis. Decay accelerating factor (DAF) (CD55) and MCP (CD46) are cell surface-expressed complement regulators that accelerate the decay of all surface-assembled C3 convertases, thereby limiting amplification of the downstream cascade. MCP and factor H (fH) also have cofactor activity: in conjunction with soluble fI, they irreversibly cleave C3b to iC3b, thereby preventing reformation of the C3 convertase. CD59 inhibits formation of the MAC.
Complement involvement in non-antibody renal disease.
| Focal segmental glomerulosclerosis | AP | C3, filtered through endothelium and glomerular basement membrane, activates through the AP and signals on podocytes to release glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor that mediates the recruitment of parietal epithelial cell (PEC) in the glomerulus. PEC proliferation leads to sclerotic lesions |
| Membranoproliferative/C3 glomerulonephritis | AP | Mutations in complement components/regulators or acquired antibodies targeting complement components lead to excessive activation of the AP in the fluid phase, with glomerular deposition of complement debris |
| Atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome | AP | Environmental triggers may precipitate complement activation in subjects with genetic predisposition including mutations of complement components |
| Chronic kidney injury and fibrosis | MBL | Intrarenal complement activation, especially of C3, activates the renin–angiotensin system and the epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition |
| AP |
AP, alternative pathway, MBL, mannose-binding lectin.
Main complement-targeting therapies.
| Name | Class | Disease | Main pathogenic mechanism | Status | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Eculizumab | Humanized monoclonal anybody | aHUS | Bind C5 to prevent generation of MAC | On the market | The first U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved anticomplement therapy |
| ALXN1210 | Humanized monoclonal anybody | aHUS | Bind C5 to prevent generation of MAC | Clinical trial phase II | Demonstrated rapid, complete and sustained reduction go free C5 levels, requiring longer dosing intervals compared to eculizumab |
| Coversin | Recombinant small protein | aHUS | Prevents the cleavage of C5 into C5a and C5b by C5 convertase | Clinical trial phase I | Covers has the potential to treat patients with polymorphisms of the C5 molecule which interfere with correct binding of eculizumab |
| CCX168 (Avacopan) | Anti-inflammatory small molecule | aHUS | Selective inhibitor of the complement C5a receptor | Clinical trial phase III | C5a receptor inhibition with avacopan was effective in replacing high-dose glucocorticoids in treating vasculitis |
| CDX-1135 | CR1-based protein | DDD | CR1 inhibitor | Clinical trial phase I | CDX-1135 has been shown safe in more than 500 patients in different clinical trials, with no relevant side effects |
| APT070 (Mirococept) | CR1-based protein | IRI in renal transplant | CR1 inhibitor | Clinical trial phase II | Mostly investigated in models of complement-mediated IRI, such as kidney transplantation in rats |
| Phase I trial proved safety | |||||
| Cinryze | C1 esterase inhibitor | Antibody-mediated rejection in renal transplant | C1 inhibitor | Clinical trial phase III | Efficacy will be tested proportion of subjects with new or worsening transplant glomerulopathy at 6 months using Banff criteria |
| OMS721 | Humanized monoclonal anybody | aHUS | Bind mannan-binding lectin-associated serine protease-2 | Clinical trial phase II | OMS721 requests a multidose administration |
| ACH-4471 | Small molecule | aHUS | Factor D inhibitors | Clinical trial phase I | ACH-4471 can be given orally and would have a delivery advantage over intravenously infused agents |
aHUS, atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome; DDD, dense deposit disease; C3GN, C3 glomerular disease; MAC, membrane attack complex; ANCA, antineutrophilic cytoplasmic antibody; IRI, ischemia–reperfusion injury; TTP, thrombotic thrombocytopenia; IgAN, IgA nephropathy.