Complement, Innate Immunity and Ocular Disease

The complement system is a major component of innate immunity. During an inflammatory reaction, the eye is potentially threatened by homologous complement attack, and unregulated complement activation could lead to tissue damage and vision loss. The complement system is continuously activated at low...

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Veröffentlicht in:Chemical immunology and allergy 2007-01, Vol.92, p.105-114
Hauptverfasser: Sohn, Jeong-Hyeon, Bora, Puran S., Jha, Prushottam, Tezel, Tongalp H., Kaplan, Henry J., Bora, Nalini S.
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container_end_page 114
container_issue
container_start_page 105
container_title Chemical immunology and allergy
container_volume 92
creator Sohn, Jeong-Hyeon
Bora, Puran S.
Jha, Prushottam
Tezel, Tongalp H.
Kaplan, Henry J.
Bora, Nalini S.
description The complement system is a major component of innate immunity. During an inflammatory reaction, the eye is potentially threatened by homologous complement attack, and unregulated complement activation could lead to tissue damage and vision loss. The complement system is continuously activated at low levels in the normal eye, and intraocular complement-regulatory proteins (CRPs) tightly regulate this spontaneous complement activation so that there is elimination of potential pathogens without the induction of destructive intraocular inflammation. The presence of a complement activation product (iC3b) during the early phase of antigen and antigen-presenting cell contact is essential for the induction of systemic tolerance to antigen injected into the anterior chamber of the eye and the establishment of ocular immune privilege. The complement system and complement-regulatory proteins control intraocular inflammation in autoimmune anterior uveitis and may play an important role in the development of age-related macular degeneration. Thus, in the eye, complement functions as a double-edged sword - on one hand it provides innate immunity against pathogens while simultaneously instructing the adaptive immune response to develop tolerance to such pathogens to avoid inadvertent tissue damage in a critical organ.
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subjects Animals
Anterior Chamber - immunology
Chapter
Complement Activation
Complement System Proteins - physiology
Eye Diseases - immunology
Humans
Immune Tolerance
Immunity, Innate
Macular Degeneration - immunology
Uveitis - immunology
title Complement, Innate Immunity and Ocular Disease
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