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Lack of Evidence from Studies of Soluble Protein Fragments that Knops Blood Group Polymorphisms in Complement Receptor-Type 1 Are Driven by Malaria

Complement receptor-type 1 (CR1, CD35) is the immune-adherence receptor, a complement regulator, and an erythroid receptor for Plasmodium falciparum during merozoite invasion and subsequent rosette formation involving parasitized and non-infected erythrocytes. The non-uniform geographical distributi...

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Autores principales: Tetteh-Quarcoo, Patience B., Schmidt, Christoph Q., Tham, Wai-Hong, Hauhart, Richard, Mertens, Haydyn D. T., Rowe, Arthur, Atkinson, John P., Cowman, Alan F., Rowe, J. Alexandra, Barlow, Paul N.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3323580/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22506052
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0034820
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author Tetteh-Quarcoo, Patience B.
Schmidt, Christoph Q.
Tham, Wai-Hong
Hauhart, Richard
Mertens, Haydyn D. T.
Rowe, Arthur
Atkinson, John P.
Cowman, Alan F.
Rowe, J. Alexandra
Barlow, Paul N.
author_facet Tetteh-Quarcoo, Patience B.
Schmidt, Christoph Q.
Tham, Wai-Hong
Hauhart, Richard
Mertens, Haydyn D. T.
Rowe, Arthur
Atkinson, John P.
Cowman, Alan F.
Rowe, J. Alexandra
Barlow, Paul N.
author_sort Tetteh-Quarcoo, Patience B.
collection PubMed
description Complement receptor-type 1 (CR1, CD35) is the immune-adherence receptor, a complement regulator, and an erythroid receptor for Plasmodium falciparum during merozoite invasion and subsequent rosette formation involving parasitized and non-infected erythrocytes. The non-uniform geographical distribution of Knops blood group CR1 alleles Sl1/2 and McC(a/b) may result from selective pressures exerted by differential exposure to infectious hazards. Here, four variant short recombinant versions of CR1 were produced and analyzed, focusing on complement control protein modules (CCPs) 15–25 of its ectodomain. These eleven modules encompass a region (CCPs 15–17) key to rosetting, opsonin recognition and complement regulation, as well as the Knops blood group polymorphisms in CCPs 24–25. All four CR1 15–25 variants were monomeric and had similar axial ratios. Modules 21 and 22, despite their double-length inter-modular linker, did not lie side-by-side so as to stabilize a bent-back architecture that would facilitate cooperation between key functional modules and Knops blood group antigens. Indeed, the four CR1 15–25 variants had virtually indistinguishable affinities for immobilized complement fragments C3b (K (D) = 0.8–1.1 µM) and C4b (K (D) = 5.0–5.3 µM). They were all equally good co-factors for factor I-catalysed cleavage of C3b and C4b, and they bound equally within a narrow affinity range, to immobilized C1q. No differences between the variants were observed in assays for inhibition of erythrocyte invasion by P. falciparum or for rosette disruption. Neither differences in complement-regulatory functionality, nor interactions with P. falciparum proteins tested here, appear to have driven the non-uniform geographic distribution of these alleles.
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spelling pubmed-33235802012-04-13 Lack of Evidence from Studies of Soluble Protein Fragments that Knops Blood Group Polymorphisms in Complement Receptor-Type 1 Are Driven by Malaria Tetteh-Quarcoo, Patience B. Schmidt, Christoph Q. Tham, Wai-Hong Hauhart, Richard Mertens, Haydyn D. T. Rowe, Arthur Atkinson, John P. Cowman, Alan F. Rowe, J. Alexandra Barlow, Paul N. PLoS One Research Article Complement receptor-type 1 (CR1, CD35) is the immune-adherence receptor, a complement regulator, and an erythroid receptor for Plasmodium falciparum during merozoite invasion and subsequent rosette formation involving parasitized and non-infected erythrocytes. The non-uniform geographical distribution of Knops blood group CR1 alleles Sl1/2 and McC(a/b) may result from selective pressures exerted by differential exposure to infectious hazards. Here, four variant short recombinant versions of CR1 were produced and analyzed, focusing on complement control protein modules (CCPs) 15–25 of its ectodomain. These eleven modules encompass a region (CCPs 15–17) key to rosetting, opsonin recognition and complement regulation, as well as the Knops blood group polymorphisms in CCPs 24–25. All four CR1 15–25 variants were monomeric and had similar axial ratios. Modules 21 and 22, despite their double-length inter-modular linker, did not lie side-by-side so as to stabilize a bent-back architecture that would facilitate cooperation between key functional modules and Knops blood group antigens. Indeed, the four CR1 15–25 variants had virtually indistinguishable affinities for immobilized complement fragments C3b (K (D) = 0.8–1.1 µM) and C4b (K (D) = 5.0–5.3 µM). They were all equally good co-factors for factor I-catalysed cleavage of C3b and C4b, and they bound equally within a narrow affinity range, to immobilized C1q. No differences between the variants were observed in assays for inhibition of erythrocyte invasion by P. falciparum or for rosette disruption. Neither differences in complement-regulatory functionality, nor interactions with P. falciparum proteins tested here, appear to have driven the non-uniform geographic distribution of these alleles. Public Library of Science 2012-04-10 /pmc/articles/PMC3323580/ /pubmed/22506052 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0034820 Text en Tetteh-Quarcoo et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Tetteh-Quarcoo, Patience B.
Schmidt, Christoph Q.
Tham, Wai-Hong
Hauhart, Richard
Mertens, Haydyn D. T.
Rowe, Arthur
Atkinson, John P.
Cowman, Alan F.
Rowe, J. Alexandra
Barlow, Paul N.
Lack of Evidence from Studies of Soluble Protein Fragments that Knops Blood Group Polymorphisms in Complement Receptor-Type 1 Are Driven by Malaria
title Lack of Evidence from Studies of Soluble Protein Fragments that Knops Blood Group Polymorphisms in Complement Receptor-Type 1 Are Driven by Malaria
title_full Lack of Evidence from Studies of Soluble Protein Fragments that Knops Blood Group Polymorphisms in Complement Receptor-Type 1 Are Driven by Malaria
title_fullStr Lack of Evidence from Studies of Soluble Protein Fragments that Knops Blood Group Polymorphisms in Complement Receptor-Type 1 Are Driven by Malaria
title_full_unstemmed Lack of Evidence from Studies of Soluble Protein Fragments that Knops Blood Group Polymorphisms in Complement Receptor-Type 1 Are Driven by Malaria
title_short Lack of Evidence from Studies of Soluble Protein Fragments that Knops Blood Group Polymorphisms in Complement Receptor-Type 1 Are Driven by Malaria
title_sort lack of evidence from studies of soluble protein fragments that knops blood group polymorphisms in complement receptor-type 1 are driven by malaria
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3323580/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22506052
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0034820
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