Acute Phase Proteins Flashcards

1
Q

What is an acute phase response?

A

A change in composition of the blood during an early stage of an infection since the liver is changing its protein production.

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2
Q

Which interleukins releases cytokines that signals the hepatocytes to change the livers protein production?

A

IL-6, IL-1, and TNF

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3
Q

What is the function of acute phase protein?

A
  • Combat infections
  • Eliminate debris from wounded tissue / aids in healing
  • Protect the host from potential dangerous parts of the inflammatory response
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4
Q

Which acute phase protein is involved with coagulation?

A

Fibrinogen, which is consumed in the tissue damage and builds fibrin networks that creates blood clots

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5
Q

What is the CRP (C-reactive proteins function)?

A

They bind to bacterial and fungal surfaces and then activates the complement system.
fun fact: It is the clinical biomarker of inflammation

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6
Q

What is the function of MBL (Mannose binding lectin)?

A

They bind to particular carbohydrate structures (mannose and fucose residues with the right spacing) on microbial structures.

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7
Q

What are the most important complement proteins and why?

A

C3 and C4. Complement proteins C3 and C4 both have a hidden thioester. When bound to surfaces R-OH this causes a strong thioester bond. A spontaneous “tick-over” temporarily exposes the thioester due to cleavage of the native molecule and it can then bind strongly to microbe surfaces.

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8
Q

The proteins in the complement system are usually proteases
that only become active when cleaved by another protease, what are the effects of the activation?

A

Local activation gives a strong and rapid amplification in the next
cleavage step, unless inhibited.

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9
Q

What are will occur regardless of the activation pathway?

A

i) the system is mainly activated by/at biological surfaces

ii) all activation pathways result in formation of C3-convertases
and surface bound C3b

iii) All activation pathways lead to a common “terminal”
pathway, surface bound C3 convertase which forms C5 convertase when bound to C3b. Enzyme-cleaving cascade forms the pore-forming membrane attack complex (MAC) which kills by destorying the membrane integrity of pathogens.

iv) true complement activation is to a large degree a result of
poor inhibition of the cascade; most microbes do not express
complement inhibitors (like host cells do)

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10
Q

The main event of activation is:

A

Proteolytic cleavage of C3 to C3b and C3a

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11
Q

The protelytic cleavage is achieved by 2 convertases that are assembled by 3 pathways, name the pathways different ways each pathways starts.

A

Classical : activated by complement protease C1q that binds directly to pathogen surface or indirect to an antigen/antibody complex .

Alternative : The protein C3 is spontanously hydrolyzed into C3a and C3b. When C3b is formed, it can bind to the surface of pathogens, such as bacteria or viruses.

Lectin : activated by MBL or ficolin that has bound to carbohydrate structures on a microbial surface.

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12
Q

Describe the classical pathway in 4 steps

A
  1. C1q binds to 2 IgG or 1 IgM via one or more globular head
  2. The activated C1s cleaves C4. This results with C4a and C4b. C4b will bind to a microbial surface.
  3. Then C4b binds to C2 which cleaves it. This results with C2a bound to C4b on the surface and C2b leaving.
  4. C4b2a is a C3 convertase and cleaves C3. C3b binds to microbial surface to be as an opsonin.
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13
Q

Describe the lectin pathway

A
  1. Activates by MBL (mannose binding lectin) or ficolins
  2. MASP-1 and 2 work similarly to C1s, same process as classical after step 2.
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14
Q

Describe the alternative pathway

A
  1. C3 undergoes spontanous hydolysis and which binds to a B factor that is cleaved by D factor
  2. C3(H2O)Bb is a soluable C3 convertase, which will cleave C3 into C3a and C3b
  3. C3b will then bind to another B factor which will cleave it into Bb and Ba. C3bBb is a C3 convertase.
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