Enhanced complement activation and MAC formation accelerates severe COVID-19

IF 6.2 2区 生物学 Q1 BIOCHEMISTRY & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
Calder R. Ellsworth, Zheng Chen, Mark T. Xiao, Chaosi Qian, Chenxiao Wang, Mst Shamima Khatun, Shumei Liu, Mohammad Islamuddin, Nicholas J. Maness, Jose A. Halperin, Robert V. Blair, Jay K. Kolls, Stephen Tomlinson, Xuebin Qin
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Abstract

Emerging evidence indicates that activation of complement system leading to the formation of the membrane attack complex (MAC) plays a detrimental role in COVID-19. However, their pathogenic roles have never been experimentally investigated before. We used three knock out mice strains (1. C3−/−; 2. C7−/−; and 3. Cd59ab−/−) to evaluate the role of complement in severe COVID-19 pathogenesis. C3 deficient mice lack a key common component of all three complement activation pathways and are unable to generate C3 and C5 convertases. C7 deficient mice lack a complement protein needed for MAC formation. Cd59ab deficient mice lack an important inhibitor of MAC formation. We also used anti-C5 antibody to block and evaluate the therapeutic potential of inhibiting MAC formation. We demonstrate that inhibition of complement activation (in C3−/−) and MAC formation (in C3−/−. C7−/−, and anti-C5 antibody) attenuates severe COVID-19; whereas enhancement of MAC formation (Cd59ab−/−) accelerates severe COVID-19. The degree of MAC but not C3 deposits in the lungs of C3−/−, C7−/− mice, and Cd59ab−/− mice as compared to their control mice is associated with the attenuation or acceleration of SARS-CoV-2-induced disease. Further, the lack of terminal complement activation for the formation of MAC in C7 deficient mice protects endothelial dysfunction, which is associated with the attenuation of diseases and pathologic changes. Our results demonstrated the causative effect of MAC in severe COVID-19 and indicate a potential avenue for modulating the complement system and MAC formation in the treatment of severe COVID-19.

Abstract Image

补体激活和 MAC 形成的增强加速了严重的 COVID-19
新的证据表明,补体系统的激活导致膜攻击复合体(MAC)的形成,在 COVID-19 中起着有害作用。然而,以前从未对它们的致病作用进行过实验研究。我们使用了三种基因敲除小鼠品系(1.C3-/-;2.C7-/-;3.Cd59ab-/-)来评估补体在严重COVID-19发病机制中的作用。缺乏 C3 的小鼠缺乏所有三种补体激活途径的关键共同成分,无法产生 C3 和 C5 转化酶。C7 缺乏小鼠缺乏 MAC 形成所需的补体蛋白。缺乏 Cd59ab 的小鼠缺乏 MAC 形成的一种重要抑制剂。我们还使用抗 C5 抗体来阻断和评估抑制 MAC 形成的治疗潜力。我们证明,抑制补体激活(C3-/-)和 MAC 形成(C3-/-、C7-/- 和抗 C5 抗体)可减轻严重的 COVID-19;而增强 MAC 形成(Cd59ab-/-)则会加速严重的 COVID-19。与对照小鼠相比,C3-/-小鼠、C7-/-小鼠和 Cd59ab-/- 小鼠肺中 MAC(而非 C3)沉积的程度与 SARS-CoV-2 诱发疾病的减轻或加速有关。此外,缺乏 C7 的小鼠缺乏形成 MAC 的末端补体激活,可保护内皮功能障碍,这与疾病和病理变化的减轻有关。我们的研究结果证明了 MAC 在严重 COVID-19 中的致病作用,并指出了调节补体系统和 MAC 形成以治疗严重 COVID-19 的潜在途径。
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来源期刊
Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences
Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences 生物-生化与分子生物学
CiteScore
13.20
自引率
1.20%
发文量
546
审稿时长
1.0 months
期刊介绍: Journal Name: Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences (CMLS) Location: Basel, Switzerland Focus: Multidisciplinary journal Publishes research articles, reviews, multi-author reviews, and visions & reflections articles Coverage: Latest aspects of biological and biomedical research Areas include: Biochemistry and molecular biology Cell biology Molecular and cellular aspects of biomedicine Neuroscience Pharmacology Immunology Additional Features: Welcomes comments on any article published in CMLS Accepts suggestions for topics to be covered
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