2009
DOI: 10.1159/000227805
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Interactions of Ficolin and Mannose-Binding Lectin with Fibrinogen/Fibrin Augment the Lectin Complement Pathway

Abstract: Ficolin and mannose-binding lectin (MBL) are animal lectins that are involved in innate immunity by initiating the lectin complement pathway. Here, we report that interactions between these lectins and fibrinogen/fibrin augment the lectin pathway. An ELISA revealed that recombinant mouse ficolin A (rFcnA), rMBL-A and rMBL-C bind to fibrinogen in a dose-dependent manner. Affinity Western blotting showed that these lectins bind to the Aα- and Bβ-chains of fibrinogen and the α- and β-chains of fibrin, but not to … Show more

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Cited by 76 publications
(57 citation statements)
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“…Ficolin (FCN2), which is induced 28-fold, may activate the lectin/complement pathway and may enhance innate immunity in the lung (37). IL6R, a component of the IL6 receptor, is induced but appears to be proinflammatory as a mediator of IL6 signaling.…”
Section: Original Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Ficolin (FCN2), which is induced 28-fold, may activate the lectin/complement pathway and may enhance innate immunity in the lung (37). IL6R, a component of the IL6 receptor, is induced but appears to be proinflammatory as a mediator of IL6 signaling.…”
Section: Original Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…17 The complement and the coagulation systems crossinteract at several molecular steps. 21,22 Proteins of the lectin pathway can induce thrombus formation through thrombin activation, [23][24][25][26][27] thus exacerbating brain damage after ischemia/ reperfusion. [28][29][30] In this study, we evaluated the role of MBL in thrombus formation and whether this interaction is involved in brain damage after ischemia/reperfusion in mice.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Lectins constitute a group of sugar-binding proteins that recognise specific carbohydrate structures allowing agglutination of foreign cells and the stimulation of phagocytosis (Endo et al, 2010;Kilpatrick, 2002) in innate immunity of bivalves (Bulgakov et al, 2004). However, the Rhamnose-binding lectin and the Immune lectin receptor 2, two lectin-like immune molecules whose expression profiles differed distinctively between 12 h and 24 h infection time, seem to suggest that infections carried out with Vibrio are yet to induce Rhamnose-binding lectin transcript levels above seawater-incubation experiments ( Fig.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%