| Literature DB >> 33811541 |
Abstract
The current outbreak of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) has affected people around the world. Typically, COVID-19 originates in the lung, but lately it can extend to other organs and lead to tissue injury and multiorgan failure in severe patients, such as acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), kidney failure and sepsis or systemic inflammation. Given that COVID-19 has been detected in a range of other organs, the COVID-19-associated disease is an alert of aberrant activation of host immune response which drives un-controlled inflammation that affects multiple organs. Complement is a vital component of innate immunity where it forms the first line of defense against potentially harmful microbes, but its role in COVID-19 is still not clear. Notably, the abnormal activation and continuous deposits of complement components were identified in the pre-clinical samples from COVID-19 patients, which have been confirmed in animal models. Recent evidence has revealed that the administration of complement inhibitors leads to relieve inflammatory response in ARDS. Hence, we speculate that the targeting complement system could be a potential treatment option for organ damage in COVID-19 patients.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Complement; Complement inhibitor; SARS-CoV-2
Year: 2021 PMID: 33811541 PMCID: PMC8019074 DOI: 10.1007/s00430-021-00704-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Med Microbiol Immunol ISSN: 0300-8584 Impact factor: 3.402
Fig. 1Complement pathways and complement inhibitors currently applied in clinical trials for COVID-19
Collective pre-clinical evidence of complement involvement in the circulation pool
| Circulation pool | Collective evidence of complement deposition | References |
|---|---|---|
| Serum | A general upregulation of complement system proteins, including MAC proteins such as C5, C6, and C8 | Shen et al |
| Serum/plasma | Consistent activation of both the classical complement pathway (C1R, C1S, and C8A) as well as the alternative pathway factor B (CFB) and the complement modulators: factor I (CFI) and H (CFH) | Messner et al |
| Plasma | Plasma levels of sC5b-9 and C5a as markers of complement activation in COVID-19 patients | Peffault de Latour et al |
| PBMCs | COVID-19 patients showed the up-regulated genes enriched in “complement activation” | Xiong et al |
| RBCs | IgG bound to RBCs from most hospitalized patients with COVID-19 was observed in most of the DAT tests | Berzuini et al |
| RBCs from patients with COVID-19 not only bound C3b/iC3b/C3dg and C4, but also bound viral spike protein | Lam et al |
Clinical evidence of complement deposition in multi-organs from COVID-19 patients
| Organ | Collective evidence of complement activation | References |
|---|---|---|
| Lung | Strong expression of MBL, MSAP2, C4a, C3, and MAC C5b-9 in paraformaldehyde-fixed lung tissue from patients who died of COVID-19 N proteins from SARS-CoV-2 could bind MBL and activate MASP-2 | Gao et al. [ |
Striking deposition of C5b-9, C4d, and MASP2 in the microvasculature were found in the lung A co-localization of COVID-19 spike glycoprotein with C4d and C5b-9 were also found in the inter-alveolar septa | Magro et al | |
| Transcriptome data from lung tissue of two patients with SARS-CoV-2 infection, and in vitro respiratory epithelial cells showed the complement pathway was one of the most significant induced pathways | Yan et al | |
| Kidney | C5b-9 deposition on tubules in all six cases along with low expression of C5b-9 on glomeruli and capillaries in kidney from COVID-19 patients | Diao et al. [ |
| Skin | Three patients with critical COVID-19 had purpuric skin rash with striking deposition of C5b-9 and C4d in both grossly involved and normally appearing skin, and colocalization of SARS-CoV-2-specific spike glycoprotein | Magro et al |
| Two children with Kawasaki-like hyperinflammatory syndrome were reported as a novel SARS-CoV-2 induced phenotype in Italy, with obvious complement consumption | Licciardi et al |
The study of complement activation in mice models during coronavirus infection
| Genotype | Collective evidence of complement activation | References |
|---|---|---|
| WT | Complement is activated after SARS-CoV MA15 (the mouse-adapted SARS-CoV) infection as demonstrated by elevated C3 activation products (C3 fragments C3a, C3b, iC3b, C3dg, and C3c) | Gralinski et al |
| C3−/− | C3−/− mice showed a partial reduction of respiratory dysfunction, pathology, immune cell infiltration, and cytokine responses in the lung, compared with WT mice | Gralinski et al |
| B−/− | Factor B−/− mice had less weight loss than WT mice | Gralinski et al |
| C4−/− | C4−/− mice had less weight loss than WT mice | Gralinski et al. [ |