Working paper icon

Working paper

A novel inhibitor of complement C5 provides structural insights into activation

Abstract:
Abstract The complement system is a crucial part of innate immune defences against invading pathogens. The blood-meal of the tick Rhipicephalus pulchellus lasts for days, and the tick must therefore rely on inhibitors to counter complement activation. We have identified a novel class of inhibitors from tick saliva, the CirpT family, and generated detailed structural data revealing their mechanism of action. We show direct binding of a CirpT to complement C5 and have determined the structure of the C5-CirpT complex by cryo-electron microscopy. This reveals an interaction with the peripheral macro globulin domain 4 (C5_MG4) of C5. To achieve higher resolution detail, the structure of the C5_MG4-CirpT complex was solved by X-ray crystallography (at 2.7 Å). We thus present the novel fold of the CirpT protein family, and provide detailed mechanistic insights into its inhibitory function. Analysis of the binding interface reveals a novel mechanism of C5 inhibition, and provides information to expand our biological understanding of the activation of C5, and thus the terminal complement pathway.
Publication status:
Not published
Peer review status:
Reviewed (other)

Actions

Access Document

Publisher copy:
10.1101/647354

Authors


Series:
bioRxiv
Publication date:
2019-05-23
DOI:


Keywords:
Pubs id:
pubs:1023342
UUID:
uuid:5a13c1d8-2c3c-4d74-adb8-4391608c67ae
Local pid:
pubs:1023342
Source identifiers:
1023342
Deposit date:
2019-07-18
ARK identifier:

Terms of use


Views and Downloads






If you are the owner of this record, you can report an update to it here: Report update to this record

TO TOP