Carbohydrate recognition and complement activation by rat ficolin-B

Date

2011-01

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Wiley

Type

Article

Peer reviewed

Yes

Abstract

Ficolins are innate immune components that bind to PAMPs and structures on apoptotic cells. Humans produce two serum forms (L- and H-ficolin) and a leukocyte-associated form (M-ficolin), whereas rodents and most other mammals produce ficolins-A and -B, orthologues of L- and M-ficolin, respectively. All three human ficolins, together with mouse and rat ficolin-A, associate with mannan-binding lectin-associated serine proteases (MASPs) and activate the lectin pathway of complement on PAMPs. By contrast, mouse ficolin-B does not bind MASPs and cannot activate complement. Because of these striking differences together with the lack of functional information for other ficolin-B orthologues, we have characterized rat ficolin-B, and compared its physical and biochemical properties with its serum counterpart. The data show that both rat ficolins have archetypal structures consisting of oligomers of a trimeric subunit. Ficolin-B recognized mainly sialyated sugars, characteristic of exogenous and endogenous ligands, whereas ficolin-A had a surprisingly narrow specificity, binding strongly to only one of 320 structures tested: an N-acetylated trisaccharide. Surprisingly, rat ficolin-B activated MASP-2 comparable to ficolin-A. Mutagenesis data reveal that lack of activity in mouse ficolin-B is probably caused by a single amino acid change in the putative MASP-binding site that blocks the ficolin-MASP interaction.

Description

Keywords

ficolin, complement activation

Citation

Venkatraman Girija, U., Mitchell, D.A., Roscher, S. and Wallis R. (2011) Carbohydrate recognition and complement activation by rat ficolin-B. European Journal of Immunology, 41 (1), pp. 214-223

Rights

Research Institute