Abstract
Activation of the third component of complement (C), C3, is central to the functioning of the C system in inflammation. Cleavage of C3 by the C3 convertases of both the classical and alternative pathways results in the formation of two split products, C3b and C3a. C3a inhibited cleavage of C3 by the classical-pathway C3 convertase. The inhibition varied in a concn-dependent relationship, with a concn of approximately 40μg/ml yielding 50% inhibition. Removal of the carboxy terminal arginine from the C3a did not alter the inhibition. C3a did not inhibit cleavage of C3 by the alternative C pathway C3 convertase, or cleavage of C5 by C5 convertase. The C3-cleaving capacity of EAC142 oxy that had been previously incubated with C3a could be recovered completely by washing the cells, indicating that the C3a binding to the EAC42 oxy cell must have been reversed without having had an effect on the amount of C2 bound. Ribonuclease, a molecule of similar size and charge to C3a, did not affect C3 cleavage and C3a inhibition was not reduced by providing a surface for non-specific adsorption of the C3a, suggesting that the effect of C3a on C3 cleavage was not mediated by non-specific interaction with cell surfaces. C3a inhibited the C3-cleaving capacity of the fluid-phase enzyme, C42 oxy, to the same degree as it inhibited the cell-bound enzyme, EAC42 oxy, indicating that the C3a must interact with the C42 complex directly. Inhibition of C3 cleavage by C3a is the first demonstration of product inhibition of a complement enzyme. It may provide another control of C3 activation.
Published Version
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