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Second line defense Complement system consists of 30 proteins exist in blood serum and tissue in an inactive form. -The final product of the activation is a complex membrane attack complex (MAC) that produces trans-membrane channels in gram negative bacteria and lyses of foreign cells. -These protein initially act as opsonins and chemotactic factors, and trigger inflammation and fever. The Functions of Complement 1. Lysis of cells, bacteria, and viruses – the major effector of the humoral branch of the immune system 2. Opsonization, which promotes phagocytosis of particulate Ags 3. Anaphylatoxin, C3a, C4a, c5a can produce degradation of mast cells and basophile with release of mediators, leading to increase vascular permeability and smooth muscle contraction. 4. Immune clearance, which removes immune complexes from the circulation and deposits them in the spleen and liver Complement Activation 1. Classical Pathway : begins with the formation of Ag-Ab complex 2. Alternative Pathway : is initiated by bacterial cell wall polysaccharides – Ab-independent 3. Lectin Pathway : is activated by the binding of mannosebinding lectin (MBL) to mannose residues on glycoproteins or carbohydrates on the surface of microorganisms – Ab-independent - Antigens are molecules that react with antibodies and sensitized lymphocytes. -Whereas immunogens are any foreign substances which when introduced into an animal, stimulate the specific immune response. - Antigen must posses these characters: • High molecular weight: manosaccharides and a`a` are not antigen , while proteins and polysaccharides are antigens. • Chemical nature: proteins and some polysaccharides are good immunogens . Lipids alone are not immunogens unless they are combined with proteins as L.P.S • Foreigness: for a substance to be antigenic it must be foreign to the animal in which it is introduced. Epitope: ( antigen determinant) The body recognizes antigens by threedimension shapes of regions called antigenic determinants, which are known as epitopes. IgG antibody Fab ( Ag- binding fragment). The actual portions of an AB molecules that have a shape corresponding to that of an epitope of an antigen Binding of epitopes to the corresponding molecules of sIg on the surface of Blymphocytes Hapten: - Small molecules less 5000 Daltons, make poor antigens by themselves because they evade detection. Such small molecules called hapten. - Hapten can become antigenic when bound to larger, carrier molecules ( protein). e.g: proteins in blood bind to penicillin which by itself is too small to trigger a specific immune response. Bound to a carrier, penicillin can become antigenic and trigger an allergic response in some patients. Categories of antigens based on 1.Exogenous antigens their relationship to the body: The source of antigen is from outside the host. e.g pollens, drugs, pollutants and microbes outside the cells of body, bear exogenous antigens. Exogenous antigens include toxins and other secretions and components of microbial cell walls, membrane, flagella, and pili. 2 – Endogenous antigens Microbes reproduce inside a body`s cells produce endogenous antigens . 3- Autoantigens: it is self antigen Are antigenic molecules found on an individual's normal cells. The body components are always recognized as (self) and so are non immunogenic under ordinary conditions Groups of antigens The Classic Pathway • Complement cascade requires presence of cations, both calcium and magnesium. • Activation of the classic pathway almost always initiated by immunoglobulin. – Requires only 1 molecule of IgM. – Requires 2 molecules of IgG. Classical Pathway Begins with Ag-Ab Binding Two IgG, One IgM The classical pathway: 1- C1 becomes an active enzyme when it binds to antibody-antigen complex. Fab of IgG or IgM bind to epitopes on an antigen , constant regions of IgG contain a binding site for C1q. Binding of C1q activates C1r and C1s forming C1( the first enzyme) 2- Activated C1 cleaves several molecules of C4 to C4a , C4b And C2 to C2a, C2b fragments of C2a and C4b combine forming C4b2a ( C3 convertase) 3- C4b2a cuts C3 to C3b( opsonin ) and C3a ( anaphylaoxin) Some C3b binds to C4b2a forming C4b2a3b ( C5 convertase) C5 convertase initiate MAC inflammatory responses inflammatory responses The membrane attack complex (MAC) Cleavage of C5 by a C5 convertase, produces: - C5a: -is a potent anaphyllatoxin (like C3a) is a chemotactic attractant for neutrophils - C5b: which serves as the anchor for the assembly of a single molecule of C6,C7and C8 the resultant complex C5b678 guides the polymerization of as many as 18 molecules of C9 into a tube inserted into the lipid bilayer of the plasma membrane . This tube forms a channel allowing the passage of ions and small molecules. Water enters the cell by osmosis and the cell lysis. Formation of C5b6789, Membrane-attack Complex Inflammatory Response: Cytokines Signal Initiation Membrane attack complex The Alternative Pathway Is Ab-independent - The activation of alternative pathway doesn’tneed Ab; thus, it is a component of the innate immune system. - It is initiated by cell-surface constituents thatare foreign to the host, e.g., bacterial cell wall. - C1, C4 and C2 are not involved in the alternativepathway. - Four serum proteins, C3, factor B, factor D, andproperdin, are involved in this pathway. -The alternative pathway C3-convertase consists of the activated B and D factors, forming an unstable compound that can become stable after binding properdin, a serum protein ( C3bBb). -After the creation of C3 convertase, the complement system follows the same path regardless of the means of activation split hundreds of molecules of C3 to C3a and C3b. - - Binding of another C3b-fragment to the C3convertase of the alternative pathway creates a C5-convertase analogous to the MBL or classical pathway. - The C5-convertase of the alternative pathway consists of C3bBbC3b that can enzymatically split hundreds of molecules of C5 into C5a and C5b. The Lectin Pathway Originates with Host Proteins Binding Microbial Surfaces Lectin: proteins that bind to a carbohydrate MBL (mannose-binding lectin): - a protein which binds to mannose residues on glycoproteins or carbohydrates on the surface of microorganisms (structurally similar to C1q) MASP-1 & MASP-II: MBL-associated serine protease (structurally similar to C1r and C1s) -When the carbohydrate-recognizing heads of MBL bind to specifically arranged mannose residues on the phospholipid bilayer of a pathogen, -MASP-I and MASP-II are activated to cleave complement components C4 and C2 into C4a, C4b, C2a, and C2b. - C4b and C2a combine on the surface of the pathogen to form C3 convertase (C4b 2a), while C4a and C2b act as chemo-attractants. Q2: Why doesn’t mannose-binding lectin (MBL) bind to host carbohydrates? A2: Mammalian cells normally have sialic acid residues covering the sugar groups recognized by MBL and are not a target for binding. Biological Effects Mediated by Complement 1. Cell lysis The membrane-attack complex can lyse a broad spectrum of cells: G(-) bacteria parasites viruses erythrocyte nucleated cells (tumor cells) Because the activation of alternative and lectin pathways is Ab-independent, these pathways serve as important innate immune defenses against infectious microorganisms. 2. Inflammatory response - Various peptides generated during activation of complement play a role in the development of an effective inflammatory response. - C3a, C4a, C5a (called anaphylatoxin) bind to complement receptors on mast cells and basophils and induce degranulation with release of histamine and other mediators. - The anaphylatoxins also induce smooth-muscle contraction, increased vascular permeability, extravasation, and chemoattraction (induced by C5a, C3a, and C5b67) 3. Opsonization - C3b is the major opsonin of the complement system, although C4b also have opsonizing activity. binds to the surface of microbes Opsonization by Ab and complement 4. Viral neutralization - Formation of larger viral aggregates reduces the net number of infectious viral particles. - The deposits of Ab and complement on viral particle neutralizes viral infectivity by blocking attachment to susceptible host cells and facilitates binding of the viral particle to cells possessing CR1. 5. Clearance of immune complexes Innate Immunity: Complement Comparison of 3 Pathways Determinants of innate immunity Innate immunity is genetically controlled and varies widely with species, race and to less extent between individuals. a)Species and race: -Man and guinea pigs are highly susceptible to diphtheria while rats are not. -Man is susceptible to common cold while dogs are not. -American Indian and Negro are more susceptible to tuberculosis than white races. B) Individual differences: Age: the very young and aged are particular liable to infection. Nutrition: Malnutrition and starvation predispose to infection by decreasing the total white cell count and phagocytosis. Hormones: Some endocrine diseases cause a decrease in resistance to infection such as diabetes mellitus, hypothroidism and adrenal dysfunction.