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Journal ArticleDOI

C1 inhibitor, a multi-functional serine protease inhibitor.

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TLDR
Treatment with C1INH treatment improves outcome in a number of disease models, including sepsis and other bacterial infections, possibly malaria, ischaemia-reperfusion injury, hyper-acute transplant rejection, and other inflammatory disease models.
Abstract
C1 inhibitor (C1INH) is a serpin that regulates both complement and contact (kallikrein-kinin) system activation. It consists of a serpin domain that is highly homologous to other serpins and an amino terminal non-serpin mucin-like domain. Deficiency of C1INH results in hereditary angioedema, a disease characterised by episodes of angioedema of the skin or the mucosa of the gastrointestinal tract or the oropharynx. Although early data suggested that angioedema was mediated via complement system activation, the preponderance of the data indicate that bradykinin is the mediator. In the past few years, it has become apparent that C1INH has additional anti-inflammatory functions independent of protease inhibition. These include interactions with leukocytes that may result in enhanced phagocytosis, with endothelial cells via E- and P-selectins that interfere with leukocyte rolling and in turn results in suppression of transmigration of leukocytes across the endothelium, and interactions with extracellular matrix components that may serve to concentrate C1INH at sites of inflammation. In addition, C1INH suppresses gram negative sepsis and endotoxin shock, partly via direct interaction with endotoxin that interferes with its interaction with macrophages, thereby suppressing tumour necrosis factor-a and other inflammatory mediators. C1INH treatment improves outcome in a number of disease models, including sepsis and other bacterial infections, possibly malaria, ischaemia-reperfusion injury (intestinal, hepatic, muscle, cardiac, brain), hyper-acute transplant rejection, and other inflammatory disease models. Recent data suggest that this effectiveness is the result of mechanisms that do not require protease inhibition, in addition to both complement and contact system activation.

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Complement System Part I - Molecular Mechanisms of Activation and Regulation

TL;DR: This article will review the mechanisms of activation of alternative, classical, and lectin pathways, the formation of C3 and C5 convertases, the action of anaphylatoxins, and the membrane-attack-complex, and discuss the importance of structure–function relationships.
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Innate Immune Recognition of Cancer

TL;DR: A deeper knowledge of the clinically relevant innate immune pathways involved in the recognition of tumors is leading toward new therapeutic strategies for cancer treatment.
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Complement deficiency states and associated infections

TL;DR: The genetic defects and molecular abnormalities in complement deficient persons, related clinically relevant infections and the options for prevention and therapy are reviewed and the roles of complement in host defense against common infections are discussed.
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A Review of Neutrophil Extracellular Traps (NETs) in Disease: Potential Anti-NETs Therapeutics.

TL;DR: NETosis is described in different diseases focusing on the detrimental effect of NETs and possible therapeutics that can be used to mitigate netosis are outlined, thereby decreasing damage to patients.
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Versatility of the complement system in neuroinflammation, neurodegeneration and brain homeostasis.

TL;DR: A novel view that complement activation can result in either protective or detrimental effects in brain conditions that depend exquisitely on the nature, the timing and the degree of the stimuli that induce its activation is prompting a novel view on the complement role in the brain.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Structure of a serpin–protease complex shows inhibition by deformation

TL;DR: The crystallographic structure of a typical serpin–protease complex is reported and the mechanism of inhibition is shown, showing the ability of the conformational mechanism to crush as well as inhibit proteases that provides the serpins with their selective advantage.
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A biochemical abnormality in herediatry angioneurotic edema: absence of serum inhibitor of c' 1-esterase.

TL;DR: Evidence suggests that absence of serum inhibitor of C′1-esterase is an inherited abnormality in those with the familial type of angioneurotic edema, and this determination may permit identification of young family members who will have attacks of swelling later in life.
Journal ArticleDOI

Plasma bradykinin in angio-oedema

TL;DR: Although the differences between patients in remission and healthy controls did not reach statistical significance, there were substantial rises in bradykinin during acute attacks of hereditary, acquired, or captopril-induced angio-oedema.
Journal ArticleDOI

Immunological processes in malaria pathogenesis.

TL;DR: This Review article addresses the innate and adaptive immune mechanisms elicited during malaria that either cause or prevent disease and fatalities, and it considers the implications for vaccine design.
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