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Contribution of functional and quantitative genetic variants of Complement Factor H and Factor H-Related (FHR) proteins on renal pathology.

Nefrología. 2022 September 23
The complement system is a first line of defence against infectious, tumoral or autoimmune processes, and it is constitutively regulated to avoid excessive or unspecific activation. Factor H (FH), a most relevant complement regulator, controls complement activation in plasma and on the cellular surfaces of autologous tissues. FH shares evolutionary origin and structural features with a group of plasma proteins known as FH-Related Proteins (FHRs), which could act as FH functional antagonists. Studies in patient cohorts of atypical Haemolytic-Uraemic Syndrome (aHUS), C3 Glomerulopathy (C3G), and IgA nephropathy (IgAN), have identified rare genetic variants that give rise to severe FH and FHRs dysfunctions, and are major genetic predisposing factors. These patients also have a higher frequency of a few polymorphisms whose relevance as disease risk factors is incompletely understood. In the last years, the availability of specific reagents has allowed a more precise quantitation of FH and FHRs in plasma samples from patients and controls. These studies have revealed that some aHUS, C3G or IgAN risk polymorphisms determine mild changes in FH or FHRs levels that could somehow perturb complement regulation and favour disease pathogenesis.

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