Surface-associated heparin inhibits zymosan-induced activation of the human alternative complement pathway by augmenting the regulatory action of the control proteins on particle-bound C3b.
Open Access
- 1 November 1979
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of Experimental Medicine
- Vol. 150 (5) , 1202-1215
- https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.150.5.1202
Abstract
Discrimination by the human alternative pathway between activating and nonactivating particles occurs after deposition of C3b by the continuous low-grade interaction of the alternative pathway components in biologic fluids and is dependent on the modulation by surface constituents of the interaction of bound C3b with the control proteins, beta 1H, and C3b inactivator (C3bINA). When heparin glycosaminoglycan was coupled to activating particles, such as zymosan or Sepharose, by cyanogen bromide activation, their capacity to activate the human alternative pathway was inhibited. The loss of alternative pathway-activating capacity was directly correlated to the number of heparin molecules bound/zymosan particle, whether the ratio was varied by increasing the amounts of heparin in the initial coupling reactions or by treating a fully inhibited particle with incremental concentrations of heparinase. Analysis by linear regression of the inhibitory effect of each procedure (r = 0.97, r = 0.98, respectively) for adjusting the number of heparin molecules/particle revealed that the dose-response relationships were identical and that complete inhibition occurred with greater than 12 X 10(8) molecules of heparin/zymosan particle. The coupling of heparin to zymosan did not impair the uptake of C3b from the fluid-phase interaction of C3, B, and D, and did not alter the capacity of bound C3b to associate with B so as to permit its inactivation by D. Although the regulatory proteins present in normal serum chelated with EDTA or presented as a combination of purified C3bINA and beta 1H were relatively inefficient in inactivating C3b function on an activating particle of the alternative pathway such as zymosan or zymosan-cyanogen bromide, the control proteins rapidly inactivated C3b on a nonactivating particle wuch as a sheep erythrocyte or zymosan with coupled heparin. The increased numbers of C3b sites susceptible to inactivation by C3bINA in the presence of beta 1H were significantly correlated to the number of molecules of heparin/particle. By linear regression analysis of the correlation (r = 0.99) the number of heparin molecules/particle required to promote total inactivation of bound C3b by purified control proteins was 13.8 X 10(6). This molecular analysis suggests that the action of heparin coupled to an activating particle of the alternative pathway is to promote the interaction between particle-bound C3b and the regulatory proteins, thereby preventing particle-associated amplified C3 cleavage. It is noteworthy that both surface constituents known to maintain a particle as a nonactivator of the alternative pathway, sialic acid and N-sulfated mucopolysaccharide, act by facilitating the inactivation by regulatory proteins of the function of particle-bound C3b.This publication has 55 references indexed in Scilit:
- Altered metabolism of heparan sulfate in simian virus 40 transformed cloned mouse cells.Journal of Biological Chemistry, 1978
- Complement C3 convertase: Cell surface restriction of β1H control and generation of restriction on neuraminidase-treated cellsProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1978
- The Modulation of the Alternative Pathway of Complement in C2-Deficient Human Serum by Changes in Concentration of the Component and Control ProteinsThe Journal of Immunology, 1978
- Regulation by membrane sialic acid of β1H-dependent decay-dissociation of amplification C3 convertase of the alternative complement pathwayProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1978
- Modulation of the formation of the amplification convertase of complement, C3b, Bb, by native and commercial heparin.The Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1978
- Modulation of the alternative complement pathways by beta 1 H globulin.The Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1976
- A modified uronic acid carbazole reactionAnalytical Biochemistry, 1962
- A Method for the Separation of Acid Mucopolysaccharides: Its Application to the Isolation of Heparin from the Skin of RatsJournal of Biological Chemistry, 1961
- THE PROPERDIN SYSTEM AND IMMUNITYThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1956
- The Properdin System and Immunity: I. Demonstration and Isolation of a New Serum Protein, Properdin, and Its Role in Immune PhenomenaScience, 1954