AI Article Synopsis

  • Granzymes are special proteins made by certain immune cells that help fight off infections and cancer by causing infected cells to die.
  • A specific granzyme, called GZMK, can activate a complex system in the body known as the complement cascade, which helps to fight infections and inflammation.
  • In diseases like rheumatoid arthritis, GZMK is found in areas where inflammation occurs, suggesting it helps make the inflammation worse by activating this complement system.

Article Abstract

Granzymes are a family of serine proteases mainly expressed by CD8 T cells, natural killer cells, and innate-like lymphocytes. Although their major role is thought to be the induction of cell death in virally infected and tumor cells, accumulating evidence suggests some granzymes can regulate inflammation by acting on extracellular substrates. Recently, we found that the majority of tissue CD8 T cells in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) synovium, inflammatory bowel disease and other inflamed organs express granzyme K (GZMK), a tryptase-like protease with poorly defined function. Here, we show that GZMK can activate the complement cascade by cleaving C2 and C4. The nascent C4b and C2a fragments form a C3 convertase that cleaves C3, allowing further assembly of a C5 convertase that cleaves C5. The resulting convertases trigger every major event in the complement cascade, generating the anaphylatoxins C3a and C5a, the opsonins C4b and C3b, and the membrane attack complex. In RA synovium, GZMK is enriched in areas with abundant complement activation, and fibroblasts are the major producers of complement C2, C3, and C4 that serve as targets for GZMK-mediated complement activation. Our findings describe a previously unidentified pathway of complement activation that is entirely driven by lymphocyte-derived GZMK and proceeds independently of the classical, lectin, or alternative pathways. Given the widespread abundance of -expressing T cells in tissues in chronic inflammatory diseases and infection, GZMK-mediated complement activation is likely to be an important contributor to tissue inflammation in multiple disease contexts.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11142156PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2024.05.22.595315DOI Listing

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