In this paper, we demonstrate the synthesis of the complement component C2 and factors B and D by the human astroglioma cell line U105-MG. All three components were structurally and antigenically similar to their serum counterparts, as determined by biosynthetic labelling studies or Western blot analysis. Northern blot analysis demonstrated that the mRNAs of all three components had the same apparent sizes as the equivalent mRNAs from hepatocyte and monocyte cell lines. Interestingly, U105-MG cells produce two C2 transcripts with sizes of approximately 2.8 and 2.3 kb. Interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma) enhanced the expression of C2 and factor B mRNA and protein in a dose- and time-dependent fashion, while factor D expression was refractory to IFN-gamma. IFN-gamma appeared to predominantly enhance the expression of the large (2.8 kb) C2 transcript. Kinetic studies demonstrated peak C2 and factor B expression in 48 h in response to IFN-gamma, similar to the acute-phase response of factor B in serum. These data are the first to demonstrate the synthesis of C2 and factor D by astroglioma cells. Combined with previous reports documenting the synthesis of C3 by astrocytes, our data suggest that endogenous synthesis of complement proteins, and particularly of alternative pathway activation components (C3, factors B and D), may play an important role in host defence in the central nervous system.
A human genomic cosmid clone, S22A, was used to characterize the structure of the human C2 gene. Eighteen exons spanning 18 kb of DNA were mapped by nucleotide sequencing of exon-containing subclones and by Southern blotting. Introns vary in length between 83 bp and 4.4 kb and all intron/exon boundaries follow the AG/GT consensus rule for splicing. Exon 1 encodes 270 bp of the 5'-untranslated region of the C2 cDNA C2HL5-3 and 15 amino acids of the leader peptide. The three short consensus repeats of C2b are encoded by the single exons 2, 3, and 4, respectively. The von Willebrand factor type A-like domain of C2a is encoded by exons 6-10 and the serine protease domain by exons 11-18. Exons 5 and 15 appear to be unique to the C2 and factor B genes.
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