| Literature DB >> 31888179 |
Sofia Andrighetto1,2, Jeremy Leventhal1, Gianluigi Zaza2, Paolo Cravedi1.
Abstract
The complement cascade is part of the innate immune system whose actions protect hosts from pathogens. Recent research shows complement involvement in a wide spectrum of renal disease pathogenesis including antibody-related glomerulopathies and non-antibody-mediated kidney diseases, such as C3 glomerular disease, atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome, and focal segmental glomerulosclerosis. A pivotal role in renal pathogenesis makes targeting complement activation an attractive therapeutic strategy. Over the last decade, a growing number of anti-complement agents have been developed; some are approved for clinical use and many others are in the pipeline. Herein, we review the pathways of complement activation and regulation, illustrate its role instigating or amplifying glomerular injury, and discuss the most promising novel complement-targeting therapies.Entities:
Keywords: C3 glomerulopathy; alternative complement pathway; complement; complement-targeting therapies; focal segmental glomerulosclerosis; hemolytic uremic syndrome
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31888179 PMCID: PMC6940904 DOI: 10.3390/ijms20246336
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Overview of the complement cascade and principal complement targeting molecules. Three pathways can initiate complement cascade: (1) The classical, (2) the mannose-binding lectin (MBL), and (3) the alternative pathway. They all converge on C3 convertases formation which continuously cleave C3; after they are activated, the C3 convertase from alternative pathway dominates within an amplification loop that sustains the production of C3b (circular arrow). The three C3 convertases associate with an additional C3b to form the C5 convertases, which cleave C5 into C5a + C5b. C5b fragments recruits C6, C7, C8, and multiple C9 molecules to generate the terminal membrane attack complex (MAC); MAC inserts pores into cell membranes to induce cell lysis or activation. Anaphilotoxins C3a and C5a through their G protein-coupled receptors C3aR and C5aR, respectively, can promote signaling, inflammation, chemotaxis of leukocytes, vasodilation, cytokine and chemokine release, and activation of adaptive immunity. Dotted black arrows: inhibitor function of a complement effector on its target. Red arrows emerging from balloons: inhibitor function of anti complement drug on its target (bold drugs’ names are the FDA approved ones). Full arrow: consequential interaction between complement fractions leads to the subsequent cascade step. Full bold arrow: final convergence of the three complement pathways on same final target. MBL: Mannose binding lectin; MASP: Mannose-binding lectin-associated serine protease; C4BP: C4 binding protein; C1-INH: C1 inhibitor; DAF: Decay accelerating factor; CR1: Surface complement receptor 1; MCP: Membrane cofactor protein; CD59: Protectin; fD: Factor D; fB: Factor B; fI: Factor I; fH: Factor H. Red balloons highlights complement target drugs’ points of action (see Table 1).
Summary of complement blocking agents.
| Name. | Class | Pharmacodinamics | Disease | Status | Additional Info |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Humanized monoclonal antibody | Binds C5 preventing MAC generation | aHUS, DDD, C3GN | Available for use in PHN and aHUS | First USA FDA-approved among anti-complement drugs |
|
| Humanized monoclonal antibody | Binds C5 preventing MAC generation | aHUS | Phase III for PHN | Induces prolonged decease of C5 plasmatic levels allowing longer dosing intervals compared to Eculizumab |
|
| Small dimension recombinant protein | Prevents cleavage of C5 into C5a/C5b by C5 convertase | aHUS | Phase II for PHN | Valid alternative for patients bearer of C5 molecule polymorphisms which interferes with correct binding of Eculizumab |
|
| Small dimension anti-inflammatory molecule | Inhibits selectively C5aR | aHUS | Phanse III for ANCA vasculitides. Phase II for aHUS | Effective replacing high-dose glucocorticoids in treating vasculitis |
|
| C1R-based molecule | Inhibits CR1 | DDD | Phase I for DDD | |
|
| CR1-based molecule | Inhibits CR1 | IRI in Tx | Phase I for DDD, C3GN | |
|
| C1 estarase | Inhibits CR1 | Antibody-mediated rejection in renal transplant | Available for use in HAE. Phase III for prevention of DGF in cadaveric allograft | FDA approved for hereditary angioedema |
|
| Humanized monoclonal antibody | Binds the mannan-binding lectin-associated serinprotease-2 | aHUS, TTP | Phase II for aHUS, IgA, LES, MN, C3G | Multi-dose administration is needed |
|
| Small dimension | Inhibits factor D | aHUS | Phase II for IC-MPGN, DDD, C3GN | Oral assumption with 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 cystoplasmic antibody, IRI: Ischemia riper fusion injury, TTP: Thrombotic thrombocytopenia, IgAN: IgA Nephropathy, HAE: Hereditary angioedema, DGF: Delayed graft function.