Efficacy of HIV-specific and ‘antibody-independent’ mechanisms for complement activation by HIV-infected cells
Autor: | Gregory T. Spear, M.‐N. Saarloos, Thomas F. Lint |
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Rok vydání: | 1995 |
Předmět: |
Immunology
Cross Reactions HIV Antibodies Complement Hemolytic Activity Assay Virus ABO Blood-Group System Cell Line Antigen Antibody Specificity Immunopathology Humans Immunology and Allergy Sida Complement Activation biology Complement C3 Flow Cytometry biology.organism_classification Complement system Immunoglobulin M Humoral immunity HIV-1 biology.protein Viral disease Antibody Research Article |
Zdroj: | Clinical and Experimental Immunology. 99:189-195 |
ISSN: | 1365-2249 0009-9104 |
Popis: | SUMMARYPrevious studies in this laboratory have shown that efficient activation of complement (C) on HIV isolates and HIV-infected cells requires the binding of specific anti-HIV antibodies, while other investigators have observed ‘antibody-independent’ C activation. In an attempt to clarify these disparate findings, we investigated the effect of several variables on C activation by HIV-infected cells using flow cytometric analysis of C3 deposition. Antibody-mediated C activation using pooled sera from infected persons or human MoAbs directed against the V3 region of gp120 was always substantially higher than activation without antibody. Normal human serum (NHS) from a subset of HIV antibody-negative donors did, however, induce low levels of C3 deposition. Differences in C3 activation between the various NHS did not correlate with total haemolytic C levels or mannose-binding protein (MBP) levels. IgM isolated from NHS that induced high levels of C activation was at least partly responsible for the ‘antibody-independent’ C activation. Although there appeared to be a correlation between NHS that induced C activation and the presence of anti-blood type B IgM, absorption of anti-B did not abrogate the C3 deposition. Additionally. MoAb to the B antigen did not induce C3 deposition. These studies show that IgM in sera from HIV-uninfected donors can induce C3 deposition on HIV-infected cells, but that specific antibody-dependent C activation is substantially more efficient. Therefore,‘antibody-independent’ C activation on HIV-infected cells may, in some cases, be more accurately described as HIV-cross-reactive antibody-dependent C activation. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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