A percolation phase transition controls complement protein coating of surfaces
1Pulmonary, Allergy, and Critical Care Division, Department of Medicine, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA.
Related Experiment Videos
View abstract on PubMed
Summary
The body's complement system, a network of blood proteins, activates sharply when encountering materials. This critical transition, observed across scales, explains how the immune system decides to attack foreign substances like nanoparticles and medical devices.
Area of Science:
- Biomaterials Science
- Immunology
- Systems Biology
Background:
- Materials entering the body trigger complex protein interactions, primarily involving the complement system.
- The complement system, comprising ~40 blood proteins, initiates inflammation upon binding to microbes, nanoparticles, and medical devices.
- Understanding the precise mechanisms governing complement system activation by materials is crucial for biomedical applications.
Purpose of the Study:
- To investigate the relationship between material properties and complement system activation.
- To identify the critical material parameters that dictate the "decision" of the complement system to attack.
- To elucidate the underlying network dynamics of complement activation.
Main Methods:
- Experimental variation of a key material parameter: surface density of complement attachment points.
- Observation of complement activation across diverse scales, from nanoparticles to macroscale pathologies.
- Development of computational models simulating minimal complement subnetworks.
Main Results:
- A sharp activation threshold for the complement system was identified, directly correlated with material surface density.
- This critical transition phenomenon was observed consistently across various engineered and biological materials.
- Computational models revealed percolation-type critical transitions in the complement response, driven by minimal subnetworks.
Conclusions:
- The "decision" of the complement system to attack a material is governed by a critical switch mechanism.
- Material surface properties, specifically attachment point density, dictate complement activation thresholds.
- The findings offer fundamental insights into host-material interactions and immune responses.