Abstract
Endotoxin-mediated inflammation and septic shock remains a grave challenge to human healthcare management. It is, therefore, a worthwhile effort to develop anti-lipopolysaccharide (LPS) strategies to prevent downstream effects. Here, we demonstrate that purified recombinant Factor C (rFC) cloned from the horseshoe crab, binds LPS with high affinity, preventing it from binding a peptide derived from the human LPS-binding protein (LBP). Factor C is an innate immune defense protein present in the horseshoe crab hemocytes. The full-length rFC was found to be more efficacious in blocking LBP-mediated downstream effects than either of the individual LPS-binding peptides (Sushi 1 and Sushi 3) derived from rFC. When added to human macrophage culture, rFC blocks the LPS-induced phosphorylation of p38, which, in turn, inhibits the consequential overexpression of TNF-α and IL-8. The tandem arrangement of the LPS-binding Sushi domains in the Factor C molecule appears to be required for the synergy and amplification of LPS-binding
