Complement enhances the clearance of large-sized soluble IgA aggregates in rats

Autor: M. Rits, Dj. Janssen, Daha, Wmjm. Bogers, La. Vanes, Hervé Bazin, Rk. Stad
Rok vydání: 1991
Předmět:
Zdroj: European Journal of Immunology. 21:1093-1099
ISSN: 1521-4141
0014-2980
DOI: 10.1002/eji.1830210502
Popis: In the present study the involvement of the complement system (C) in the clearance of soluble IgA aggregates in the rat was studied. Monoclonal monomeric IgA (mIgA) antibody (which does not activate C) or aggregated polymeric IgA (aIgA; which activates C) were administered intravenously to phosphate-buffered saline-treated and complement-depleted [Cobra venom factor (CVF)-treated] rats and assessed for clearance from the circulation. In the control rats, mIgA was cleared in a biphasic fashion with a first half-life (T1/2) of 29.5 +/- 14.2 min and a second T1/2 of 230 +/- 176 min. No differences were observed in clearance of mIgA in CVF-treated rats as compared to PBS-treated rats. In PBS-treated rats, aIgA with a size between 20S and 150S disappeared very rapidly from the circulation with a first T1/2 of 1.1 +/- 0.4 min and a second T1/2 of 23.2 +/- 11.3 min. In CVF-treated rats the clearance of aIgA was significantly delayed as compared to that in control rats, namely with a first T1/2 of 7.3 +/- 2.6 min and a second T1/2 of 64.2 +/- 19.4 min. Immunohistochemical studies of the liver (which is the main site of clearance of aIgA) revealed that Kupffer cells (KC) are mainly responsible for the uptake of aIgA. Furthermore, in PBS-treated rats aIgA deposition was accompanied by C3 deposition in the KC. In CVF-treated rats, the percentage of KC containing aIgA was significantly lower during the first 16 min after aIgA administration as compared to PBS treated rats. In addition no detectable C3 was found in KC of CVF-treated rats. These results indicate that KC plays an important role in the clearance of large molecular weight IgA in rats and that C facilitates the clearance of these complexes from the circulation.
Databáze: OpenAIRE