Literature DB >> 9058824

A soluble chimeric complement inhibitory protein that possesses both decay-accelerating and factor I cofactor activities.

P J Higgins1, J L Ko, R Lobell, C Sardonini, M K Alessi, C G Yeh.   

Abstract

A chimeric gene was constructed from the genes coding for the human complement regulatory proteins, membrane cofactor protein (CD46) and decay-accelerating factor (CD55). The recombinant chimeric gene was transfected into Chinese hamster ovary cells. The gene product is a soluble, glycosylated, 110-kDa protein named complement activation blocker-2 (CAB-2). This protein possesses both factor I cofactor activity and decay-accelerating activity, and inactivates classical and alternative C3/C5 convertases in vitro. The specific activity of CAB-2 against cell-associated convertases is greater than that of soluble forms of either membrane cofactor protein or decay-accelerating factor or of both factors combined. CAB-2 also blocks the activation of complement in vivo, inhibiting both the Arthus reaction and Forssman shock in guinea pigs. Studies in rats demonstrate CAB-2 to exhibit favorable biphasic pharmacokinetics with a t1/2 alpha of 10 min and a t1/2 beta of 8 h; the beta phase accounts for 93% of the administered dose. CAB-2 may be an effective therapeutic treatment of acute human diseases in which excessive complement activation causes damage to normal tissues.

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Year:  1997        PMID: 9058824

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Immunol        ISSN: 0022-1767            Impact factor:   5.422


  11 in total

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9.  Inhibition of complement regulation is key to the pathogenesis of active Heymann nephritis.

Authors:  B Schiller; C He; D J Salant; A Lim; J J Alexander; R J Quigg
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10.  Prevention of experimental autoimmune myasthenia gravis by rat Crry-Ig: A model agent for long-term complement inhibition in vivo.

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