THE Complemen T System: Shebina Babu D3 Biotech
THE Complemen T System: Shebina Babu D3 Biotech
COMPLEMEN
T SYSTEM
Shebina
Babu
D3
Introducti
on
The complement system is the major
effector of the humoral branch of
the immune system. It refers to a
system of factors present in normal
serum which is activated by Ag-Ab
interactions and results in
biologically significant consequences.
(e.gC4b2a,C3bBb).
Complement Activation
The complement proteins remain in an inactive form in
the blood plasma. They are made active by certain
substances called activating agents which can be
bacteria
Viruses
Aggregated antibodies like IgG,IgA
endotoxins
Yeast etc.
When one component is activated, other components
are triggered in a cascade pattern to bring the
biological activity such as lysis, phagocytosis etc.
When a component is activated, it acquires
the following unique properties:-
The activated complement binds to
biological membrane.
It generates enzyme activity.
It activates the next complement protein.
The early steps, culminating in formation of
C5b, can occur by :-
the classical pathway,
the alternative or properdin pathway,
the lectin pathway.
The final steps that lead to a membrane
attack are the same in all pathways.
The Classical Pathway
Complement activation by the classical
pathway commonly begins with the formation
of soluble antigen-antibody complexes
(immune complexes) or with the binding of
antibody to antigen on a suitable target, such
as a bacterial cell.
IgM and certain subclasses of IgG (human
IgG1, IgG2, and IgG3) can activate the
classical complement pathway. The initial
stage of activation involves C1, C2, C3, and
C4, which are present in plasma in
functionally inactive forms.
Because the components were named in
The formation of Ag-Ab complex induces
conformational changes in the Fc portion of the
IgM molecule that expose a binding site for the
C1 component of the complement system.
The recognition unit of C1 is C1q,which reacts
with the Fc pieceof bound IgM or IgG.
Binding of C1q to Fc binding sites induces a
conformational change in C1r that converts C1r
to an active serine protease enzyme, C1r, which
then cleaves C1s to a similar active enzyme,
C1s. C1s has two substrates, C4 and C2.
C4 is split into C4a and C4b.
C4b in presence of magnesium ions cleaves C2
into C2a,(which remaies linked to cell-bound
C4b),and C4b.
C3 convertase splits into two fragments C3a
(which is anaphylatoxin) and C3b which
remains bound to C4b2a to form trimolecular
complex C4b2a3b,also called as C5 convertase.
C4a
Bacteria
C1qrs C2
C4
C3
antibody
C5
C4b
C2b
C4a
C3b
C2a
Bacteria
C3a
C1qrs C2
C4 C3
antibody
C5
C4b
C2b
C3b C4a
C5b C2a
Bacteria
C3a
C5a
C1qrs
antibody
C4b C6
C2b
C3b C7
C5b C8
C6
C7 C9
C8
Bacteria C9 C9
C9 C9
C9 C9
The Alternative
Pathway
The alternative pathway generates bound C5b, the
same
product that the classical pathway generates, but it
does so without the need for antigen-antibody
complexes for initiation.
Because no antibody is required, the alternative
pathway
is a component of the innate immune system. This
major pathway of complement activation involves four
serum proteins: C3, factor B, factor D, and properdin.
The alternative pathway is initiated in most cases by
cell-surface constituents that are foreign to the host.
C3, is subjected to hydrolysis to yield
C3a and C3b. The C3b component can
bind to foreign surface antigens (such as
those on bacterial cells or viral particles)
or even to the hosts own cells .
The C3b present on the surface of the
foreign cells can bind another serum
protein called factor B to form a complex
stabilized by Mg2.
Binding to C3b exposes a site on factor B
that serves as the substrate for an
enzymatically active serum protein called
factor D.
Factor D cleaves the C3b-bound factor B,
releasing a small
The C3 convertase activity of C3bBb has
a half-life of only 5 minutes unless the
serum protein properdin(Factor P) binds
to it, stabilizing it and extending the half-
life of this convertase activity to 30
minutes.
The C3 convertase activity of C3bBb
generates the C3bBb3b complex, which
exhibits C5 convertase activity, analogous to
the C4b2a3b complex in the classical pathway.
The nonenzymatic C3b component binds C5,
and the Bb component subsequently
hydrolyzes the bound C5 to generate C5a and
C5b, leading to further steps in the cascade.
Alternative Complement
Pathway
C3
B
C5
C3b
C3a
Bacteria
Alternative Complement
Pathway
C3
B
C5
C3b
Bb
C3a
Bacteria
Alternative Complement
Pathway
C3
B
C5
C3b
Bb
C5b C3a
Bacteria C5a
Animation complete
C6
C3b C7
Bb
C5b C8
C6 C9
C7
C8
C9
Bacteria C9 C9
C9 C9
C9 C9
Animation complete
The Lectin Pathway
Lectins are proteins that recognize and bind to
specific carbohydrate targets. (Because the lectin that
activates complement binds to mannose residues, it is
also called the MBLectin pathway or mannan-binding
lectin pathway.)
The lectin pathway, like the alternative pathway, does
not depend
on antibody for its activation.However, the mechanism
is more like that of the classical pathway, because
after initiation, it proceeds, through the action of C4
and C2, to produce a C5 convertase.
The lectin pathway is activated by the binding of
mannose- binding lectin (MBL) to mannose residues on
glycoproteins or carbohydrates on the surface of
microorganisms including certain Salmonella, Listeria,
and Neisseria strains, as well as Cryptococcus
After MBL binds to the surface of a cell or
pathogen, MBL-associated serine proteases,MASP-1
and MASP-2, bind to MBL. The active complex formed
by this association causes cleavage and activation of
C4 and C2.
The MASP-1 and -2 proteins have structural
similarity to C1r and C1s and mimic their activities.
This means of activating the C2C4 components to
form a C5 convertase without need for specific
antibody
binding represents an important innate defense
mechanism
comparable to the alternative pathway, but utilizing
the elements of the classical pathway except for the
C1 proteins.
The Three Complement Pathways Converge at the
Membrane-Attack Complex.
The terminal sequence of complement activation
involves C5b, C6, C7, C8, and C9, which interact
sequentially to form a macromolecular structure called
the membrane-attack complex (MAC). This complex
forms a large channel through the membrane of the
target cell, enabling ions and small molecules to diffuse
freely across the membrane.
Negative test
Ag+test serum+ complement 37 C complement
not fixed
1 hour
Complement Deficiencies
Deficiency Syndrome