Skip to main content
Developmental Immunology logoLink to Developmental Immunology
. 1992;3(1):67–84. doi: 10.1155/1992/39710

Serum Amyloid P Component (SAP)-Like Protein From Botryllid Ascidians Provides a Clue to Amyloid Function

V L Scofield 1,, L Puntambekar 1, S F Schluter 2, D R Coombe 3
PMCID: PMC2275902  PMID: 1343104

Abstract

The HA-1 lectin isolated from Botrylloides leachii has an amino acid composition similar to that of mammalian serum amyloid protein (SAP). SAP is a universal component of mammalian amyloid deposits. Like SAP, HA-1 has a disc ultrastructure, and antibody to HA-1 binds both (a) to amyloidlike fibers deposited between rejected Botrylloides colonies and (b) to cerebral amyloid deposits in Alzheimer's disease brains. Deposition of protochordate amyloid within rejection sites and surrounding fouling organisms implies that these fibers function as barriers to allogeneic and infectious challenge. Similarly, mammalian amyloid may also function to contain inflammatory lesions and to limit the spread of certain infections. Pathological amyloidotic conditions in humans, such as Alzheimer's disease, may result from unregulated expression of this primitive encapsulation response.

Keywords: SAP, amyloid, pentraxin, protochordate, HA-1 lectin

Full Text

The Full Text of this article is available as a PDF (3.5 MB).


Articles from Developmental Immunology are provided here courtesy of Wiley

RESOURCES