The complement system is the major effector of
humoral immune respose
Jules Bordet (1890s)
Sheep antiserum Lysis
of Vibrio cholera cells
Bacteriolytic activity
Heating
of
Sheep
antiserum Absence of
bacteriolytic
activity
Intact Vibrio cholerae cells
Heated Sheep antiserum +
fresh
serum
with
no
antibodies Bacteriolytic
activity Lysis of Vibrio
cholerae cells
Nomenclature of Complements
Complement components are designated by
numerals (C1 C9), by letter symbols (E.g.,
factor
D),
or
by
trivial
names
(e.g.,
homologous restriction factor).
Complement
fragmentation
Sequential
activation
of
complement
components occurs via one of three
pathways :
The classical pathway is initiated when C1
binds to antigen-antibody complexes.
The alternative
pathway is initiated by
binding of spontaneously generated C3b to
activating surfaces such as microbial cell
walls.
The lectin pathway is initiated by binding of
the serum protein MBL to the surface of a
pathogen.
All three pathways generate C3 and C5
convertases and bound C5b, which is
converted into a membrane attack complex
Classical Pathway
The membrane attack complex forms a large
channel through the membrane of the target cell,
enabling ions and small molecules to diffuse
All the complement reactions take place on
the hydrophilic surface of membranes or on
immune complexes in the fluid phase. As
C5b6 binds to C7, the resulting complex
undergoes
a
hydrophilic-amphiphilic
structural
transition
that
exposes
hydrophobic regions, which serve as binding
sites for membrane phospholipids.
The alternative
independent
pathway is Antibody