Figueroa J E, Densen P
Department of Internal Medicine, VA Medical Center, Iowa City, Iowa.
Clin Microbiol Rev. 1991 Jul;4(3):359-95. doi: 10.1128/CMR.4.3.359.
The complement system consists of both plasma and membrane proteins. The former influence the inflammatory response, immune modulation, and host defense. The latter are complement receptors, which mediate the cellular effects of complement activation, and regulatory proteins, which protect host cells from complement-mediated injury. Complement activation occurs via either the classical or the alternative pathway, which converge at the level of C3 and share a sequence of terminal components. Four aspects of the complement cascade are critical to its function and regulation: (i) activation of the classical pathway, (ii) activation of the alternative pathway, (iii) C3 convertase formation and C3 deposition, and (iv) membrane attack complex assembly and insertion. In general, mechanisms evolved by pathogenic microbes to resist the effects of complement are targeted to these four steps. Because individual complement proteins subserve unique functional activities and are activated in a sequential manner, complement deficiency states are associated with predictable defects in complement-dependent functions. These deficiency states can be grouped by which of the above four mechanisms they disrupt. They are distinguished by unique epidemiologic, clinical, and microbiologic features and are most prevalent in patients with certain rheumatologic and infectious diseases. Ethnic background and the incidence of infection are important cofactors determining this prevalence. Although complement undoubtedly plays a role in host defense against many microbial pathogens, it appears most important in protection against encapsulated bacteria, especially Neisseria meningitidis but also Streptococcus pneumoniae, Haemophilus influenzae, and, to a lesser extent, Neisseria gonorrhoeae. The availability of effective polysaccharide vaccines and antibiotics provides an immunologic and chemotherapeutic rationale for preventing and treating infection in patients with these deficiencies.
补体系统由血浆蛋白和膜蛋白组成。前者影响炎症反应、免疫调节和宿主防御。后者是补体受体,介导补体激活的细胞效应,还有调节蛋白,保护宿主细胞免受补体介导的损伤。补体激活通过经典途径或替代途径发生,这两条途径在C3水平汇聚并共享一系列末端成分。补体级联反应的四个方面对其功能和调节至关重要:(i)经典途径的激活,(ii)替代途径的激活,(iii)C3转化酶的形成和C3沉积,以及(iv)膜攻击复合物的组装和插入。一般来说,致病微生物进化出的抵抗补体作用的机制针对的就是这四个步骤。由于单个补体蛋白具有独特的功能活性并按顺序被激活,补体缺陷状态与补体依赖性功能的可预测缺陷相关。这些缺陷状态可根据它们破坏上述四种机制中的哪一种进行分组。它们具有独特的流行病学、临床和微生物学特征,在某些风湿性和感染性疾病患者中最为常见。种族背景和感染发生率是决定这种患病率的重要辅助因素。虽然补体无疑在宿主抵御许多微生物病原体中发挥作用,但它在抵御包膜细菌方面似乎最为重要,尤其是脑膜炎奈瑟菌,还有肺炎链球菌、流感嗜血杆菌,以及在较小程度上的淋病奈瑟菌。有效的多糖疫苗和抗生素的可用性为预防和治疗这些缺陷患者的感染提供了免疫和化疗依据。