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Binding of factor H to tubular epithelial cells limits interstitial complement activation in ischemic injury
Author(s) -
Brandon Renner,
Viviana P. Ferreira,
Claudio Cortés,
Ryan Goldberg,
Danica Galešić Ljubanović,
Michael K. Pangburn,
Matthew C. Pickering,
Stephen Tomlinson,
Amanda Holland-Neidermyer,
Derek Strassheim,
V. Michael Holers,
Joshua M. Thurman
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
kidney international
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.499
H-Index - 276
eISSN - 1523-1755
pISSN - 0085-2538
DOI - 10.1038/ki.2011.115
Subject(s) - alternative complement pathway , complement system , complement factor b , factor h , classical complement pathway , decay accelerating factor , kidney , complement factor i , microbiology and biotechnology , ischemia , acute kidney injury , immunology , medicine , chemistry , biology , antibody
Factor H is a regulator of the alternative pathway of complement, and genetic studies have shown that patients with mutations in factor H are at increased risk for several types of renal disease. Pathogenic activation of the alternative pathway in acquired diseases, such as ischemic acute kidney injury, suggests that native factor H has a limited capacity to control the alternative pathway in the kidney. Here we found that an absolute deficiency of factor H produced by gene deletion prevented complement activation on tubulointerstitial cells after ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) injury, likely because alternative pathway proteins were consumed in the fluid phase. In contrast, when fluid-phase regulation by factor H was maintained while the interaction of factor H with cell surfaces was blocked by a recombinant inhibitor protein, complement activation after renal I/R increased. Finally, a recombinant form of factor H, specifically targeted to sites of C3 deposition, reduced complement activation in the tubulointerstitium after ischemic injury. Thus, although factor H does not fully prevent activation of the alternative pathway of complement on ischemic tubules, its interaction with the tubule epithelial cell surface is critical for limiting complement activation and attenuating renal injury after ischemia.

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