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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Isolation and characterization of C1q, a subcomponent of the first component of complement, from human and rabbit sera.

Kenneth B.M. Reid, +2 more
- 01 Dec 1972 - 
- Vol. 130, Iss: 3, pp 749-763
TLDR
Collagenase digestion of human or rabbit subcomponent C1q caused a rapid loss of haemolytic activity which correlated with the breakdown of collagenous regions in the molecule.
Abstract
1. C1q, a subcomponent of the first component of complement, has been isolated, in a haemolytically active and soluble form, by ion-exchange chromatography and gel filtration, from human and rabbit sera. Yields ranged from 10 to 25mg/litre of serum and the activity of final preparations was consistently in the range 5×103−15×103 C1qH50 units/mg. 2. The molecular weights of human and rabbit subcomponent C1q were 409600 and 417600, as determined by sedimentation equilibrium studies. 3. Subcomponent C1q from both species was shown to be composed of non-covalently linked subunits of approximately 57000 molecular weight as determined by gel-filtration or sedimentation equilibrium studies in 5.3m-guanidinium chloride. Reduction or oxidation of human and rabbit subcomponent C1q yielded three chains each having a molecular weight of approximately 23000 and which differed slightly in amino acid composition but markedly in carbohydrate content. The oxidized chains were separated, on a preparative scale, by ion-exchange chromatography in 8m-urea on DEAE-cellulose. 4. Both human and rabbit subcomponent C1q contained hydroxyproline, hydroxylysine, a high percentage of glycine and approximately 8% carbohydrate. Glutamic acid and aspartic acid were the free N-terminal amino acids of human subcomponent C1q whereas only serine was found in rabbit subcomponent C1q. 5. Collagenase digestion of human or rabbit subcomponent C1q caused a rapid loss of haemolytic activity which correlated with the breakdown of collagenous regions in the molecule.

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Book ChapterDOI

The classical complement pathway: activation and regulation of the first complement component.

TL;DR: It appears that immune complex dependent activation is not under positive host regulation, but C1 activation by small immune complexes or complexes formed with nonavid antibody or with ratios of antigen to antibody far from equivalence, all of which are poor C1 activators, may well be regulated by C1-In.
Journal ArticleDOI

Subunit composition and structure of subcomponent C1q of the first component of human complement.

TL;DR: A structure for subcomponent C1q is proposed and is based on the assumption that the collagen-like regions of 78 residues in each of the A, B and C chains are combined to form a triple-helical structure of the same type as is found in collagens.
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Complete Amino Acid Sequence of the Mu Heavy Chain of a Human IgM Immunoglobulin

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Activation of the complement system by antibody-antigen complexes: the classical pathway.

TL;DR: The structure of the components C1 to C5 and their assembly on antibody–antigen aggregates and what is known of the biosynthesis of these components is discussed.
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The purification and properties of the lectin from potato tubers, a hydroxyproline-containing glycoprotein

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