C1-inhibitor

C1-inhibitor (C1-inh, C1 esterase inhibitor) is a protease inhibitor belonging to the serpin superfamily. Its main function is the inhibition of the complement system to prevent spontaneous activation but also as the major regulator of the contact system. C1-inhibitor is an acute-phase protein that circulates in blood at levels of around 0.25 g/L. The levels rise ~2-fold during inflammation. C1-inhibitor irreversibly binds to and inactivates C1r and C1s proteases in the C1 complex of classical pathway of complement. MASP-1 and MASP-2 proteases in MBL complexes of the lectin pathway are also inactivated. This way, C1-inhibitor prevents the proteolytic cleavage of later complement components C4 and C2 by C1 and MBL. Although named after its complement inhibitory activity, C1-inhibitor also inhibits proteases of the fibrinolytic, clotting, and kinin pathways. Note that C1-inhibitor is the most important physiological inhibitor of plasma kallikrein, FXIa, and FXIIa.

SERPING1
Available structures
PDBOrtholog search: PDBe RCSB
Identifiers
AliasesSERPING1, C1IN, C1INH, C1NH, HAE1, HAE2, serpin family G member 1
External IDsOMIM: 606860 MGI: 894696 HomoloGene: 44 GeneCards: SERPING1
Orthologs
SpeciesHumanMouse
Entrez

710

12258

Ensembl

ENSG00000149131

ENSMUSG00000023224

UniProt

P05155

P97290

RefSeq (mRNA)

NM_001032295
NM_000062

NM_009776

RefSeq (protein)

NP_000053
NP_001027466

NP_033906

Location (UCSC)Chr 11: 57.6 – 57.62 MbChr 2: 84.6 – 84.61 Mb
PubMed search
Wikidata
View/Edit HumanView/Edit Mouse
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