The story of complement factor I

Factor I was first discovered in 1966. Its importance became apparent with the description of the original Factor I deficient patient in Boston in 1967. This patient presented with a hyperactive alternative complement pathway resulting in secondary complement deficiency due to continuous complement...

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Veröffentlicht in:Immunobiology (1979) 2019-07, Vol.224 (4), p.511-517
1. Verfasser: Lachmann, Peter J
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description Factor I was first discovered in 1966. Its importance became apparent with the description of the original Factor I deficient patient in Boston in 1967. This patient presented with a hyperactive alternative complement pathway resulting in secondary complement deficiency due to continuous complement consumption. On the basis of these findings, the mechanism of the alternative pathway was worked out. In 1975, the surprise finding was made that elevating levels of Factor I in plasma down-regulated the alternative pathway. Attempts to exploit this finding for clinical use had a long and frustrating history and it was not until 2019 that the first patient was treated with the gene therapy vector for age related macular degeneration by Professor Sir Robert MacLaren in Oxford. This review follows the long and contorted course from initial observations to clinical use of complement Factor I.
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subjects Age related degeneration
Animals
C3b breakdown cycle
C3b feedback cycle
Complement
Complement Activation - genetics
Complement Activation - immunology
Complement Factor I - chemistry
Complement Factor I - physiology
Complement Factor I - therapeutic use
Complement Pathway, Alternative - genetics
Complement Pathway, Alternative - immunology
Complement System Proteins - genetics
Complement System Proteins - immunology
Complement System Proteins - metabolism
Conglutinin
Disease Susceptibility
Factor I
Humans
Immunoconglutinins - immunology
Signal Transduction
Structure-Activity Relationship
title The story of complement factor I
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