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Two major serum components antigenically related to complement factor H are different glycosylation forms of a single protein with no factor H-like complement regulatory functions.

C Timmann, M Leippe and R D Horstmann
J Immunol February 15, 1991, 146 (4) 1265-1270;
C Timmann
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M Leippe
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R D Horstmann
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Abstract

Factor H is a 150-kDa serum glycoprotein with key regulatory functions in the alternative pathway of complement activation. Two glycoproteins with a molecular mass of approximately 42 and 37 kDa that react with an antiserum against factor H were purified from human plasma. The two glycoproteins have identical N-terminal amino acid sequences but differ in glycosylation. Sequence comparisons indicated that they both correspond to a 1.4-kb mRNA recently cloned from human liver cDNA. The serum concentration of the two glycoproteins together was estimated to be approximately 40 mg/liter. They were found not to exert factor H-like regulatory functions in the alternative pathway. Thus, the 42-kDa glycoprotein described here appears to be distinct from the previously characterized factor H-related protein of similar size, suggesting that human serum contains two factor-H related molecules which both have a molecular mass of 41 to 43 kDa but which differ largely in structure.

  • Copyright © 1991 by American Association of Immunologists
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The Journal of Immunology
Vol. 146, Issue 4
15 Feb 1991
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Two major serum components antigenically related to complement factor H are different glycosylation forms of a single protein with no factor H-like complement regulatory functions.
C Timmann, M Leippe, R D Horstmann
The Journal of Immunology February 15, 1991, 146 (4) 1265-1270;

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Two major serum components antigenically related to complement factor H are different glycosylation forms of a single protein with no factor H-like complement regulatory functions.
C Timmann, M Leippe, R D Horstmann
The Journal of Immunology February 15, 1991, 146 (4) 1265-1270;
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Print ISSN 0022-1767        Online ISSN 1550-6606