4.6 Review

More than a Pore: Nonlytic Antimicrobial Functions of Complement and Bacterial Strategies for Evasion

Journal

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/MMBR.00177-20

Keywords

autophagy; bacterial pathogenesis; complement; innate immunity; macrophages; neutrophils; opsonization; phagocytosis; virulence factors

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Funding

  1. NIAID NIH HHS [R01 AI145325, R01 AI145310, R01 AI154149] Funding Source: Medline

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The complement system is a crucial defense mechanism in immune responses against various pathogens, playing multiple roles beyond direct membrane lysis. While Gram-positive bacteria possess inherent resistance to complement-mediated killing, complement can still flag and destroy these bacteria through alternative mechanisms, demonstrating its versatility in the immune defense.
The complement system is an evolutionarily ancient defense mechanism against foreign substances. Consisting of three proteolytic activation pathways, complement converges on a common effector cascade terminating in the formation of a lytic pore on the target surface. The classical and lectin pathways are initiated by pattern recognition molecules binding to specific ligands, while the alternative pathway is constitutively active at low levels in circulation. Complement-mediated killing is essential for defense against many Gram-negative bacterial pathogens, and genetic deficiencies in complement can render individuals highly susceptible to infection, for example, invasive meningococcal disease. In contrast, Gram-positive bacteria are inherently resistant to the direct bactericidal activity of complement due to their thick layer of cell wall peptidoglycan. However, complement also serves diverse roles in immune defense against all bacteria by flagging them for opsonization and killing by professional phagocytes, synergizing with neutrophils, modulating inflammatory responses, regulating T cell development, and cross talk with coagulation cascades. In this review, we discuss newly appreciated roles for complement beyond direct membrane lysis, incorporate nonlytic roles of complement into immunological paradigms of host-pathogen interactions, and identify bacterial strategies for complement evasion.

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