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Complement and complement-like activity in lower vertebrates and invertebrates

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TLDR
Lysis-inducing activity of purified CVF occurs in a wide range of species, has revealed activities resembling those of terminal C-components in lower vertebrates and invertebrates, and provides one means for study of C-like activities in primitive species.
Abstract
A purified cobra venom factor with C-inhibiting activity also promotes lysis of erythrocytes in fresh mammalian serum. Lysis-inducing activity of purified cobra venom factor was found in sera of lower vertebrates including the cyclostome hagfish and in invertebrates. Lysis-inducing activity was most effective with frog serum. Frog serum was found to be more hemolytic for E(s) in the presence of CVF than when cells were sensitized with hemolysin. The hemolysis induced by CVF with frog serum, as in the higher vertebrates, was inhibited when sera were pretreated with known C inhibitors including heat, chelators, endotoxin, immune complexes, and CVF itself. Complexes formed with CVF and either frog serum or invertebrate hemolymph promoted lysis of indicator cells in the presence of frog serum in EDTA. This lysis was most marked when the starfish-CVF complex was used and was C-dependent. Conversely, complex formed with frog serum and CVF promoted lysis of E in the presence of invertebrate hemolymph (Limulus) in EDTA. Hence, serum components were to some degree at least interchangeable between vertebrate sera and invertebrate hemolymph. Lysis-inducing activity of purified CVF occurs in a wide range of species, has revealed activities resembling those of terminal C-components in lower vertebrates and invertebrates, and provides one means for study of C and C-like activities in primitive species.

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Journal ArticleDOI

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Nonspecific complement activation by streptococcal structures. II. Properdin-independent initiation of the alternate pathway.

TL;DR: It is speculated that the phylogenetic role of the alternate complement pathway may be the primordial nonspecific defense system which has retained certain fundamental aspects up to the present time.
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Specific hemagglutinin and a modulator of complement in cockroach hemolymph.

TL;DR: The hemolytic intermediate formed after treatment of cockroach hemolymph with cobra venom factor was active in the presence of serum treated with ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid to inactivate the early complement components.
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Humoral immunity in long-lived arthropods

TL;DR: The ability to purify significant quantities of both proteins from the plasma of the American horseshoe crab Limulus polyphemus has enabled us to investigate their functions at the molecular and organismal levels.
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The thioester bond of C3

TL;DR: C3 shares the thioester bond with several other proteins, principally the fourth complement protein, C4, and α2-macroglobulin, and the three proteins share extensive amino acid homology throughout their structure, particularly in the vicinity of the bond.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Methods for the separation, purification and measurement of nine components of hemolytic complement in guinea-pig serum.

TL;DR: C′1 precipitates from normal guinea-pig serum at ionic strength 0.04-0.06 and pH 5.5 and may be purified further by reprecipitation during dialysis against 0.005 m phosphate buffer, pH 7.5.
Journal Article

Two Anticomplementary Factors in Cobra Venom: Hemolysis of Guinea Pig Erythrocytes by One of Them

TL;DR: The low molecular weight cobra factor (140,000) has both anticomplementary activity and guinea pig erythrocyte hemolytic activity in vitro and mechanisms for the hemolysis of guinea pigs by cobrafactor are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

A plasmin-split fragment of C'3 as a new chemotactic factor.

TL;DR: The biologic significance of the plasmin-generated chemotactic factor is discussed in relation to other recently discovered biologically active fragments of C'3 and it is calculated that this fragment accounts for approximately 4% of the intact molecule.
Journal Article

C5 Chemotactic Fragments Produced by an Enzyme in Lysosomal Granules of Neutrophils

TL;DR: The presence in the neutrophil of an enzyme capable of cleaving C5 into chemotactically active fragments may reflect the potential for the neutophil to exacerbate in a non-immunologic manner the acute inflammatory process once it is underway.
Book ChapterDOI

Immunologic tissue injury mediated by neutrophilic leukocytes.

TL;DR: The significance of the various mechanisms to human disease and the mediation of acute immunologic injury of tissues in which certain proteins from the plasma, together with certain cellular factors, notably the neutrophilic leukocytes, play significant and interdependent roles is discussed.
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