Functional characterization of human C3/cobra venom factor hybrid proteins for therapeutic complement depletion

David C. Fritzinger*, Brian E. Hew, Mike Thorne, Michael K. Pangburn, Piet Gros, Bert J.C. Janssen, Carl Wilhelm Vogel

*Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

    Abstract

    Cobra venom factor (CVF) is a structural and functional analog of complement C3 isolated from cobra venom. Both CVF and C3b can bind factor B and subsequently form the bimolecular C3/C5 convertases CVF,Bb or C3b,Bb, respectively. The two homologous enzymes exhibit several differences of which the difference in physico-chemical stability is most important, allowing continuous activation of C3 and C5 by CVF,Bb, leading to serum complement depletion. Here we describe the detailed functional properties of two hybrid proteins in which the 113 or 315 C-terminal residues of C3 were replaced with corresponding CVF sequences. Both hybrid proteins formed stable convertases that exhibited C3-cleaving activity, although at different rates. Neither convertase cleaved C5. Both convertases showed partial resistance to inactivation by factors H and I, allowing them to deplete complement in human serum. These data demonstrate that functionally important structural differences between CVF and C3 are located in the very C-terminal region of both homologous proteins, and that small substitutions in human C3 with homologous CVF sequence result in C3 derivatives with CVF-like functions. Such hybrid proteins are important tools to study the structure/function relationships in both C3 and CVF, and these "humanized CVF" proteins may become reagents for therapeutic complement depletion.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)105-116
    Number of pages12
    JournalDevelopmental and Comparative Immunology
    Volume33
    Issue number1
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 1 Jan 2009

    Funding

    This work was supported in part by Hawaii Community Foundation Grant (Geist Foundation) No. 20010639 to David C. Fritzinger.

    Keywords

    • C3 convertase
    • C5 convertase
    • Cobra venom factor
    • Complement component C3
    • Complement depletion
    • Convertase formation and activity
    • Convertase stability
    • Hybrid proteins

    Fingerprint

    Dive into the research topics of 'Functional characterization of human C3/cobra venom factor hybrid proteins for therapeutic complement depletion'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

    Cite this