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Proteolytic cleavage of CR1 on human erythrocytesin vivo: evidence for enhanced cleavage in AIDS

机译:Proteolytic cleavage of CR1 on human erythrocytesin vivo: evidence for enhanced cleavage in AIDS

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AbstractThe number of complement receptor type 1 (CR1; CD35) on human erythrocytes (E) decreases during normalin vivoaging. Patients with acquired immunodefiziency syndrome (AIDS) have an acquired deficiency of CR1 on E. The possible mechanisms responsible for the loss of CR1 from E include the release of small vesicles from the E membrane and proteolytic cleavage of CR1. When compared to E of normal donors and of asymptomatic human immunodeficiency virus HIV+subjects, E of patients with AIDS had fewer CR1/E (p<0.001), but had the same number of two glycosylphosphatidyl‐inositol‐anchored proteins, decay‐accelerating‐factor (DAF) and CD59. When compared to young E, old E separated by density gradients on Percoll had fewer CR1 [six normal subjects, mean loss: 50.4 ± 4.9 (SEM) %], DAF (34.4 ± 1.2%) and CD59 (34.5 ± 2.7%). The loss of CR1 was significantly higher than the loss of DAF and CD59 (p<0.02).In vitro, ATP depletion of E is responsible for the release of vesicles from the E surface, a reaction that has been calledin vitroaging. CR1, DAF and CD59 were lost on ATP‐depleted E; however, the loss of CR1 and DAF were identical (six experiments, mean loss for CR1: 28.7 ± 2.7%, DAF: 26.3 ± 4.6% and CD59: 20.5 ± 4%). Thus, the release of vesicles from E cannot explain the specific loss of CR1 in patients with AIDS and would explain only incompletely the loss of CR1 duringin vivoaging.In vitroexperiments indicated that CR1 was more sensitive to trypsin and papain cleavage than DAF and CD59. Enhanced chemiluminescence Western blotting, using a monoclonal antibody (E11) recognizing fragments of CR1 down to 43 kDa on E exposed to trypsin or papain, indicated that normal E bear fragments of CR1, which are not found on polymorphonulcear leukocytes or on CR1‐bearing vesicles in urine. The relative amount of these fragments was increased in patients with AIDS. Taken together these data suggest that the specific loss of CR1 on E in AIDS is due to proteolytic cleavage. The loss of CR1 duringin vivoaging also involves proteolytic cleavage, although part of the loss might be explained by other mechanisms including the release

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