Abstract

Ficolin and mannose-binding lectin (MBL) are animal lectins that are involved in innate immunity by initiating the lectin complement pathway. Here, we report that interactions between these lectins and fibrinogen/fibrin augment the lectin pathway. An ELISA revealed that recombinant mouse ficolin A (rFcnA), rMBL-A and rMBL-C bind to fibrinogen in a dose-dependent manner. Affinity Western blotting showed that these lectins bind to the Aα- and Bβ-chains of fibrinogen and the α- and β-chains of fibrin, but not to the γ-chain, and that rMBL-A and rMBL-C preferentially bind to the α- and β-chains. The C4 deposition activity on Fbg-coated plates was observed by using mouse serum, and the deposition on GlcNAc-coated plates was enhanced by fibrinogen supplementation and further enhanced by the addition of thrombin. Similar effects of fibrinogen and fibrin were observed in the bindings of these lectins to a Gram-positive pathogen, Staphylococcus aureus, and in the subsequent C3 deposition on the bacteria. In particular, the lectin pathway, through MBLs, seemed to synchronize with blood coagulation. Therefore, it is suggested that the lectin pathway collaborates with the coagulation system in the first-line host defense against pathogens under conditions such as injury and inflammation.

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