Role of the Classical Pathway of Complement Activation in Experimentally Induced Polymicrobial Peritonitis

Author:

Celik Ilhan1,Stover Cordula2,Botto Marina3,Thiel Steffen4,Tzima Sotiria2,Künkel Dieter1,Walport Mark3,Lorenz Wilfried1,Schwaeble Wilhelm52

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Theoretical Surgery1 and

2. Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of Leicester, Leicester,2 and

3. Rheumatology Section, Hammersmith Campus, Imperial College School of Medicine, London,3 United Kingdom; and

4. Department of Medical Microbiology and Immunology, University of Århus, Århus, Denmark4

5. Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology,5 Philipps University Marburg, Marburg, Germany;

Abstract

ABSTRACT The complement system and the natural antibody repertoire provide a critical first-line defense against infection. The binding of natural antibodies to microbial surfaces opsonizes invading microorganisms and activates complement via the classical pathway. Both defense systems cooperate within the innate immune response. We studied the role of the complement system in the host defense against experimental polymicrobial peritonitis using mice lacking either C1q or factor B and C2. The C1q-deficient mice lacked the classical pathway of complement activation. The factor B- and C2-deficient mice were known to lack the classical and alternative pathways, and we demonstrate here that these mice also lacked the lectin pathway of complement activation. Using inoculum doses adjusted to cause 42% mortality in the wild-type strain, none of the mice deficient in the three activation routes of complement (factor B and C2 deficient) survived (mortality of 100%). Mortality in mice deficient only in the classical pathway of complement activation (C1q deficient) was 83%. Application of further dilutions of the polymicrobial inoculum showed a dose-dependent decrease of mortality in wild-type controls, whereas no changes in mortality were observed in the two gene-targeted strains. These results demonstrate that the classical activation pathway is required for an effective antimicrobial immune defense in polymicrobial peritonitis and that, in the infection model used, the remaining antibody-independent complement activation routes (alternative and lectin pathways) provide a supporting line of defense to gain residual protection in classical pathway deficiency.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology

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1. Immune mechanisms in the pathogenesis of acute peritonitis G.V. Bulava;Transplantologiya. The Russian Journal of Transplantation;2023-03-20

2. Protective role of host complement system in Aspergillus fumigatus infection;Frontiers in Immunology;2022-09-23

3. C1q as a target molecule to treat human disease: What do mouse studies teach us?;Frontiers in Immunology;2022-08-03

4. Drug delivery systems as immunomodulators for therapy of infectious disease: Relevance to COVID-19;Advanced Drug Delivery Reviews;2021-11

5. Intracellular Delivery: An Overview;Targeted Intracellular Drug Delivery by Receptor Mediated Endocytosis;2019

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