Complement C1 inhibitor protein

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Revision as of 01:21, 19 February 2009 by imported>Robert Badgett (New page: In medicine, '''complement C1 inhibitor protein''' ('''C1 esterase inhibitor''' or '''C1 INH protein''') is an "endogenous serine protease inhibitor (serpins). It is a 105-kDa plasma g...)
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In medicine, complement C1 inhibitor protein (C1 esterase inhibitor or C1 INH protein) is an "endogenous serine protease inhibitor (serpins). It is a 105-kDa plasma glycoprotein, encoded by C1NH gene and produced primarily by the liver and monocytes. It inhibits a broad spectrum of proteases, including the complement c1r and the complement C1S proteases of the classical complement pathway, and the mannose-binding protein-associated serine proteases. C1-INH-deficient individuals suffer from hereditary angioedema".[1]

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