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Microbial evasion of the complement system: a continuous and evolving story

Mariam T. Heggi, Hanzada T. Nour El‐Din, Dina I. Morsy, Noha I. Abdelaziz, Ahmed S. Attia

2024Frontiers in Immunology22 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The complement system is a fundamental part of the innate immune system that plays a key role in the battle of the human body against invading pathogens. Through its three pathways, represented by the classical, alternative, and lectin pathways, the complement system forms a tightly regulated network of soluble proteins, membrane-expressed receptors, and regulators with versatile protective and killing mechanisms. However, ingenious pathogens have developed strategies over the years to protect themselves from this complex part of the immune system. This review briefly discusses the sequence of the complement activation pathways. Then, we present a comprehensive updated overview of how the major four pathogenic groups, namely, bacteria, viruses, fungi, and parasites, control, modulate, and block the complement attacks at different steps of the complement cascade. We shed more light on the ability of those pathogens to deploy more than one mechanism to tackle the complement system in their path to establish infection within the human host.

Topics & Concepts

Complement systemClassical complement pathwayComplement receptorComplement (music)Complement control proteinComplement membrane attack complexComplement component 2BiologyInnate immune systemEvasion (ethics)Alternative complement pathwayComputational biologyImmune systemMechanism (biology)Cell biologyImmunologyGeneticsGenePhilosophyEpistemologyPhenotypeComplementationComplement system in diseasesMosquito-borne diseases and controlBurkholderia infections and melioidosis
Microbial evasion of the complement system: a continuous and evolving story | Litcius