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Complement in the Brain: Contributions to Neuroprotection, Neuronal Plasticity, and Neuroinflammation

Suzanne S. Bohlson, Andrea J. Tenner

2023Annual Review of Immunology95 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The complement system is an ancient collection of proteolytic cascades with well-described roles in regulation of innate and adaptive immunity. With the convergence of a revolution in complement-directed clinical therapeutics, the discovery of specific complement-associated targetable pathways in the central nervous system, and the development of integrated multi-omic technologies that have all emerged over the last 15 years, precision therapeutic targeting in Alzheimer disease and other neurodegenerative diseases and processes appears to be within reach. As a sensor of tissue distress, the complement system protects the brain from microbial challenge as well as the accumulation of dead and/or damaged molecules and cells. Additional more recently discovered diverse functions of complement make it of paramount importance to design complement-directed neurotherapeutics such that the beneficial roles in neurodevelopment, adult neural plasticity, and neuroprotective functions of the complement system are retained.

Topics & Concepts

NeuroprotectionComplement systemNeuroscienceBiologyNeuroinflammationComplement (music)Acquired immune systemInnate immune systemClassical complement pathwayCentral nervous systemImmune systemImmunologyInflammationComplementationPhenotypeGeneBiochemistryNeuroinflammation and Neurodegeneration MechanismsComplement system in diseasesAlzheimer's disease research and treatments
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