Insights into IgM-mediated complement activation based on in situ structures of IgM-C1-C4b

Autor/innen

  • T.H. Sharp
  • A.L. Boyle
  • C.A. Diebolder
  • A. Kros
  • A. Koster
  • P. Gros

Journal

  • Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America

Quellenangabe

  • Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 116 (24): 11900-11905

Zusammenfassung

  • Antigen binding by serum Ig-M (IgM) protects against microbial infections and helps to prevent autoimmunity, but causes life-threatening diseases when mistargeted. How antigen-bound IgM activates complement-immune responses remains unclear. We present cryoelectron tomography structures of IgM, C1, and C4b complexes formed on antigen-bearing lipid membranes by normal human serum at 4 °C. The IgM-C1-C4b complexes revealed C4b product release as the temperature-limiting step in complement activation. Both IgM hexamers and pentamers adopted hexagonal, dome-shaped structures with Fab pairs, dimerized by hinge domains, bound to surface antigens that support a platform of Fc regions. C1 binds IgM through widely spread C1q-collagen helices, with C1r proteases pointing outward and C1s bending downward and interacting with surface-attached C4b, which further interacts with the adjacent IgM-Fab(2) and globular C1q-recognition unit. Based on these data, we present mechanistic models for antibody-mediated, C1q-transmitted activation of C1 and for C4b deposition, while further conformational rearrangements are required to form C3 convertases.


DOI

doi:10.1073/pnas.1901841116