The structure of complement C3b provides insights into complement activation and regulation.
Nature. 2006 Nov 9; 444:221-5
Nature. 2006 Nov 9; 444:221-5
John Atkinson, Washington University School of Medicine, MO, USA. F1000 Immunology
15 Dec 2006 | New Finding
** NOTE FROM EDITORIAL: Since being evaluated, the structure that is the basis of this article has been withdrawn from the PDB (for further details see http://main.uab.edu/Sites/reporter/articles/71570 )**
Finally and wonderfully, the structures of C3, C3b, C3c and C3dg have now all been solved. Three remarkable reports and an informative editorial {1-3} describe the structure of C3b using helpful metaphors of a "puppeteer (and puppet)," a "warhead," and "exposure of an executioner."
The incredible structural rearrangements, including a big shift of the thioester-containing domain, that accompany the proteolytic cleavage of C3 to generate C3b are put in the context of the function and regulation of this key/central component of the complement cascade.
References:
{1} Janssen et al. Nature 2006, 444:213-6 [PMID:17051160].
{2} Wiesmann et al. Nature 2006, 444:217-20 [PMID:17051150].
{3} Carroll M, Nature 2006, 444:159-60 [PMID:17051146].
Atkinson J: "** NOTE FROM EDITORIAL: Since being evaluated, the structure that is the basis..." Evaluation of: [Abdul Ajees A et al. The structure of complement C3b provides insights into complement activation and regulation. Nature. 2006 Nov 9; 444:221-5; doi: 10.1038/nature05258]. Faculty of 1000, 15 Dec 2006. F1000.com/1053703#eval505622
Short form
Atkinson J: 2006. F1000.com/1053703#eval505622
Faculty of 1000 evaluations, dissents and comments for [Abdul Ajees A et al. The structure of complement C3b provides insights into complement activation and regulation. Nature. 2006 Nov 9; 444:221-5; doi: 10.1038/nature05258]. Faculty of 1000, 15 Dec 2006. F1000.com/1053703
Short form
Faculty of 1000: 2006. F1000.com/1053703
The human complement system is an important component of innate immunity. Complement-derived products mediate functions contributing to pathogen killing and elimination. However, inappropriate activation of the system contributes to the pathogenesis of immunological and inflammatory diseases. Complement component 3 (C3) occupies a central position because of the manifold biological activities of its activation fragments, including the major fragment, C3b, which anchors the assembly of convertases effecting C3 and C5 activation. C3 is converted to C3b by proteolysis of its anaphylatoxin domain, by either of two C3 convertases. This activates a stable thioester bond, leading to the covalent attachment of C3b to cell-surface or protein-surface hydroxyl groups through transesterification. The cleavage and activation of C3 exposes binding sites for factors B, H and I, properdin, decay accelerating factor (DAF, CD55), membrane cofactor protein (MCP, CD46), complement receptor 1 (CR1, CD35) and viral molecules such as vaccinia virus complement-control protein. C3b associates with these molecules in different configurations and forms complexes mediating the activation, amplification and regulation of the complement response. Structures of C3 and C3c, a fragment derived from the proteolysis of C3b, have revealed a domain configuration, including six macroglobulin domains (MG1-MG6; nomenclature follows ref. 5) arranged in a ring, termed the beta-ring. However, because neither C3 nor C3c is active in complement activation and regulation, questions about function can be answered only through direct observations on C3b. Here we present a structure of C3b that reveals a marked loss of secondary structure in the CUB (for 'complement C1r/C1s, Uegf, Bmp1') domain, which together with the resulting translocation of the thioester domain provides a molecular basis for conformational changes accompanying the conversion of C3 to C3b. The total conformational changes make many proposed ligand-binding sites more accessible and create a cavity that shields target peptide bonds from access by factor I. A covalently bound N-acetyl-l-threonine residue demonstrates the geometry of C3b attachment to surface hydroxyl groups.
DOI: 10.1038/nature05258
PMID: 17051152
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