CHARACTERIZATION OF RABBIT COMPLEMENT COMPONENT C8 - FUNCTIONAL EVIDENCE FOR THE SPECIES-SELECTIVE RECOGNITION OF C8-ALPHA BY HOMOLOGOUS RESTRICTION FACTOR (CD59)
Rv. White et al., CHARACTERIZATION OF RABBIT COMPLEMENT COMPONENT C8 - FUNCTIONAL EVIDENCE FOR THE SPECIES-SELECTIVE RECOGNITION OF C8-ALPHA BY HOMOLOGOUS RESTRICTION FACTOR (CD59), The Journal of immunology, 152(5), 1994, pp. 2501-2508
Protection of host cells from lysis by the C5b-9 cytolytic complex is
provided by a membrane-associated protein (CD59) that interacts with h
omologous C8 and C9 during C5b-9 assembly. This interaction restricts
normal formation and function of the complex, thereby protecting cells
from attack by homologous C. In this study, rabbit C8 was purified an
d characterized and used to investigate the role of the individual C8
subunits in homologous restriction and the basis for species selectivi
ty by human CD59. Exchanging the disulfide-linked C8 alpha-gamma dimer
in human C8 with one from rabbit was found to be sufficient to overco
me restriction by human Es. Activity of the hybrid C8 and rabbit C8 to
ward these target cells was equivalent, thus establishing that restric
tion is not dependent on the species of C8 beta. Because C8 gamma was
previously shown to have no role in restriction, these results suggest
that within C8, structural determinant(s) recognized by CD59 reside s
olely on C8 alpha. Sequences determined from full-length cDNA clones f
or rabbit C8 alpha, C8 beta, and C8 gamma support this conclusion. All
three subunits are strikingly similar to human with regard to length,
m.w., N- and C-terminal residues, conserved cysteines, and overall se
quence. However, when sequences are compared under high stringency, a
single segment of extended sequence dissimilarity is detected between
the two species of C8 alpha. Within human C8 alpha, this 37-residue se
gment resides near the putative membrane-interacting region and may co
nstitute a human CD59 recognition site.