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result(s) for
"Antigens, Surface - physiology"
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How macrophages deal with death
2019
Tissue macrophages rapidly recognize and engulf apoptotic cells. These events require the display of so-called eat-me signals on the apoptotic cell surface, the most fundamental of which is phosphatidylserine (PtdSer). Externalization of this phospholipid is catalysed by scramblase enzymes, several of which are activated by caspase cleavage. PtdSer is detected both by macrophage receptors that bind to this phospholipid directly and by receptors that bind to a soluble bridging protein that is independently bound to PtdSer. Prominent among the latter receptors are the MER and AXL receptor tyrosine kinases. Eat-me signals also trigger macrophages to engulf virus-infected or metabolically traumatized, but still living, cells, and this ‘murder by phagocytosis’ may be a common phenomenon. Finally, the localized presentation of PtdSer and other eat-me signals on delimited cell surface domains may enable the phagocytic pruning of these ‘locally dead’ domains by macrophages, most notably by microglia of the central nervous system.In this Review, Greg Lemke explains how macrophages are able to sense and respond to dead and dying cells. The author discusses the physiological implications of such macrophage activity.
Journal Article
Alveolar macrophages: plasticity in a tissue-specific context
2014
Key Points
Alveolar macrophages exist in a complex and unique environment. The ever-changing needs of the lungs mean that the functional and phenotypical plasticity of alveolar macrophages is essential for the appropriate initiation and resolution of lung inflammation.
In healthy individuals, alveolar macrophages do not neatly fit into any category using the current macrophage classification system.
Alveolar macrophages express a unique range of receptors that regulate their function in the healthy state.
Efferocytosis of apoptotic cells and wound repair limit alveolar macrophage responses in the resolution of inflammation. This can lead to long-term consequences, including bacterial superinfection.
Important information could be obtained if we increase our understanding of how the threshold of alveolar macrophage activation is set by the varying global microenvironments that are encountered at birth.
In this Review, the authors describe the unique molecular and functional features of alveolar macrophages that distinguish these cells from other macrophage populations. They discuss how alveolar macrophages are able to shape both pro-inflammatory and tolerogenic immune responses in the lung in order to maintain health at this site.
Alveolar macrophages exist in a unique microenvironment and, despite historical evidence showing that they are in close contact with the respiratory epithelium, have until recently been investigated in isolation. The microenvironment of the airway lumen has a considerable influence on many aspects of alveolar macrophage phenotype, function and turnover. As the lungs adapt to environmental challenges, so too do alveolar macrophages adapt to accommodate the ever-changing needs of the tissue. In this Review, we discuss the unique characteristics of alveolar macrophages, the mechanisms that drive their adaptation and the direct and indirect influences of epithelial cells on them. We also highlight how airway luminal macrophages function as sentinels of a healthy state and how they do not respond in a pro-inflammatory manner to antigens that do not disrupt lung structure. The unique tissue location and function of alveolar macrophages distinguish them from other macrophage populations and suggest that it is important to classify macrophages according to the site that they occupy.
Journal Article
Flavivirus internalization is regulated by a size-dependent endocytic pathway
by
Hackett, Brent A.
,
Cherry, Sara
in
Antigens
,
Antigens, Surface - genetics
,
Antigens, Surface - physiology
2018
Flaviviruses enter host cells through the process of clathrin-mediated endocytosis, and the spectrum of host factors required for this process are incompletely understood. Here we found that lymphocyte antigen 6 locus E (LY6E) promotes the internalization of multiple flaviviruses, including West Nile virus, Zika virus, and dengue virus. Perhaps surprisingly, LY6E is dispensable for the internalization of the endogenous cargo transferrin, which is also dependent on clathrin-mediated endocytosis for uptake. Since viruses are substantially larger than transferrin, we reasoned that LY6E may be required for uptake of larger cargoes and tested this using transferrin-coated beads of similar size as flaviviruses. LY6E was indeed required for the internalization of transferrin-coated beads, suggesting that LY6E is selectively required for large cargo. Cell biological studies found that LY6E forms tubules upon viral infection and bead internalization, and we found that tubule formation was dependent on RNASEK, which is also required for flavivirus internalization, but not transferrin uptake. Indeed, we found that RNASEK is also required for the internalization of transferrin-coated beads, suggesting it functions upstream of LY6E. These LY6E tubules resembled microtubules, and we found that microtubule assembly was required for their formation and flavivirus uptake. Since microtubule end-binding proteins link microtubules to downstream activities, we screened the three end-binding proteins and found that EB3 promotes virus uptake and LY6E tubularization. Taken together, these results highlight a specialized pathway required for the uptake of large clathrin-dependent endocytosis cargoes, including flaviviruses.
Journal Article
The B7–CD28 superfamily
2002
Key Points
The B7-1/B7-2–CD28/CTLA-4 co-stimulatory pathway has a crucial role in regulating T-cell activation and tolerance.
New B7 and CD28 family members and new pathways have recently been identified that seem to be especially important for regulating the responses of previously activated, rather than antigen-inexperienced, T cells.
B7-1 and B7-2 are expressed on professional antigen-presenting cells (APCs), with B7-2 being expressed earlier. B7-2 is more important than B7-1 in initiating T-cell responses. The new B7 homologues are also expressed on cells other than professional APCs, indicating that there might be new mechanisms for regulating T-cell responses in peripheral tissues.
In contrast to the constitutive expression of CD28, the CD28 homologue ICOS is induced rapidly on T cells after TCR engagement. ICOS expression is stimulated by both TCR and CD28 signals.
The ligand for ICOS (ICOSL) is expressed at low levels on resting B cells, some macrophages and dendritic cells, and can be induced by IFN-γ. ICOSL is also expressed on other cell types, including fibroblasts.
Although the signals through CD28 are crucial for the initial co-stimulation of interleukin 2 (IL-2) production, ICOS signals only modestly influence T-cell proliferation and IL-2 production. ICOS signals are most important for regulating cytokine production by recently activated and effector T cells: ICOS can regulate both T
H
1 and T
H
2 effector cytokine production, and it has a particularly important role in regulating IL-10 production.
ICOS has a crucial role in T-cell–B-cell collaboration and promotes immunoglobulin isotype class switching and germinal centre formation
The CD28 family member PD-1 is inducibly expressed on T cells, B cells and myeloid cells, and has an ITIM/ITSM motif in its cytoplasmic domain that recruits SHP-2. PD-1-deficient mice develop late-onset progressive arthritis, lupus-like glomerulonephritis and myocarditis, showing that PD-1 has a role in downregulating immune responses.
PD-1 binds to two B7 homologues, PD-L1 (B7-H1) and PD-L2 (B7-DC), but not to other B7 family members. The PD-1 ligands bind to PD-1 but no other CD28 family members. PD-L1 and PD-L2 are expressed in lymphoid and non-lymphoid tissues, and in some tumours.
PD-L1 and PD-L2 can inhibit proliferation and cytokine production by previously activated T cells, and can antagonize a B7-2 signal when antigenic stimulation is weak or limiting. Like CTLA-4, PD-1 engagement can lead to cell cycle arrest.
Some studies support a role for PD-L1 and PD-L2 in stimulating T-cell responses.
The B7-1/B7-2–CD28/CTLA-4 pathway is crucial in regulating T-cell activation and tolerance. New B7 and CD28 molecules have recently been discovered and new pathways have been delineated that seem to be important for regulating the responses of previously activated T cells. Several B7 homologues are expressed on cells other than professional antigen-presenting cells, indicating new mechanisms for regulating T-cell responses in peripheral tissues. Some B7 homologues have unknown receptors, indicating that other immunoregulatory pathways remain to be described. Here, we summarize our current understanding of the new members of the B7 and CD28 families, and discuss their therapeutic potential.
Journal Article
MFGE8 inhibits inflammasome-induced IL-1β production and limits postischemic cerebral injury
by
Kubis, Nathalie
,
Lerouet, Dominique
,
Deroide, Nicolas
in
Adenosine Triphosphate - metabolism
,
Adenosine Triphosphate - physiology
,
Animals
2013
Milk fat globule-EGF 8 (MFGE8) plays important, nonredundant roles in several biological processes, including apoptotic cell clearance, angiogenesis, and adaptive immunity. Several recent studies have reported a potential role for MFGE8 in regulation of the innate immune response; however, the precise mechanisms underlying this role are poorly understood. Here, we show that MFGE8 is an endogenous inhibitor of inflammasome-induced IL-1β production. MFGE8 inhibited necrotic cell-induced and ATP-dependent IL-1β production by macrophages through mediation of integrin β(3) and P2X7 receptor interactions in primed cells. Itgb3 deficiency in macrophages abrogated the inhibitory effect of MFGE8 on ATP-induced IL-1β production. In a setting of postischemic cerebral injury in mice, MFGE8 deficiency was associated with enhanced IL-1β production and larger infarct size; the latter was abolished after treatment with IL-1 receptor antagonist. MFGE8 supplementation significantly dampened caspase-1 activation and IL-1β production and reduced infarct size in wild-type mice, but did not limit cerebral necrosis in Il1b-, Itgb3-, or P2rx7-deficient animals. In conclusion, we demonstrated that MFGE8 regulates innate immunity through inhibition of inflammasome-induced IL-1β production.
Journal Article
Proatherogenic immune responses are regulated by the PD-1/PD-L pathway in mice
by
Lichtman, Andrew H.
,
Sharpe, Arlene
,
Gotsman, Israel
in
Animals
,
Antigen-Presenting Cells - immunology
,
Antigens
2007
T lymphocyte responses promote proatherogenic inflammatory events, which are influenced by costimulatory molecules of the B7 family. Effects of negative regulatory members of the B7 family on atherosclerosis have not been described. Programmed death-ligand 1 (PD-L1) and PD-L2 are B7 family members expressed on several cell types, which inhibit T cell activation via binding to programmed death-1 (PD-1) on T cells. In order to test whether the PD-1/PD-L pathway regulates proatherogenic T cell responses, we compared atherosclerotic lesion burden and phenotype in hypercholesterolemic PD-L1/2(-/-)LDLR(-/-) mice and LDLR(-/-) controls. PD-L1/2 deficiency led to significantly increased atherosclerotic burden throughout the aorta and increased numbers of lesional CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cells. Compared with controls, PD-L1/2(-/-)LDLR(-/-) mice had iliac lymphadenopathy and increased numbers of activated CD4(+) T cells. Serum levels of TNF-alpha were higher in PD-L1/2(-/-)LDLR(-/-) mice than in controls. PD-L1/2-deficient APCs were more effective than control APCs in activating CD4(+) T cells in vitro, with or without cholesterol loading. Freshly isolated APCs from hypercholesterolemic PD-L1/2(-/-)LDLR(-/-) mice stimulated greater T cell responses than did APCs from hypercholesterolemic controls. Our findings indicate that the PD-1/PD-L pathway has an important role in downregulating proatherogenic T cell response and atherosclerosis by limiting APC-dependent T cell activation.
Journal Article
MUC13 promotes the development of colitis-associated colorectal tumors via β-catenin activity
2019
Many adenocarcinomas, including colorectal cancer (CRC), overexpress the MUC13 cell surface mucin, but the functional significance and mechanisms are unknown. Here, we report the roles of MUC13 in colonic tumorigenesis and tumor progression. High-MUC13 expression is associated with poor survival in two independent patient cohorts. In a comprehensive series of in vivo experiments, we identified a critical role for MUC13 in the development of this malignancy, by promoting survival and proliferation of tumor-initiating cells and driving an immunosuppressive environment that protects tumors from checkpoint inhibitor immunotherapy. In Muc13-deficient mice, fewer tumors are generated after exposure to carcinogens and inflammation, they have markedly reduced β-catenin signaling, have more tumor-infiltrating CD103
+
dendritic cells and CD8
+
T lymphocytes, fewer myeloid-derived suppressor cells, and are rendered sensitive to checkpoint inhibitor immunotherapy (anti-PD-L1). Mechanistically, we show that MUC13 protects β-catenin from degradation, by interacting with GSK-3β, which increases β-catenin nuclear translocation and promotes its signaling, thereby driving cancer initiation, progression, invasion, and immune suppression. Therefore, MUC13 is a potential marker of poor prognosis in colorectal cancer, and inhibiting MUC13 may be useful in the treatment of colitis-associated cancer and sensitizing tumors to immunotherapy.
Journal Article
Tumour-processed osteopontin and lactadherin drive the protumorigenic reprogramming of microglia and glioma progression
2016
Tumour tissue is infiltrated by myeloid cells that are reprogrammed into alternatively activated/regenerative (M2) macrophages. The contribution of major signalling pathways and their modulators/targets involved in the macrophage reprogramming is poorly known. Glioblastoma (malignant brain tumour) attracts and reprograms brain-resident microglia and peripheral macrophages into cells that increase invasion, angiogenesis and suppress antitumour immunity. Using a ‘function-first’ approach and glioma secretome proteomics we identified osteopontin and lactadherin as proteins that cooperatively activate amoeboid transformation, phagocytosis and motility of primary microglia cultures via integrins and FAK-Akt (focal adhesion kinase-Akt) signalling. A synthetic peptide interfering with integrin ligands blocks glioma–microglia communication, functional activation and M2 gene expression. We found that osteopontin/secreted phosphoprotein 1 (Spp1) produced by non-transformed cells acts as a proinflammatory factor inducing inflammatory signalling and M1 genes, and counteracts the action of lactadherin. Using constructs encoding functional mutants of osteopontin, we demonstrated sequential processing of Spp1 by thrombin and matrix metalloproteinase-3 and/or -7 (MMP-3 and/or -7) in glioma cells, which generates a microglia-activating form devoid of the inflammatory activity, while retaining the M2 reprogramming potential. A similar form of osteopontin is secreted by human glioma cells but not normal human astrocytes. Knockdown of osteopontin or lactadherin in glioma cells reduces intracranial glioma growth, blocks amoeboid transformation of myeloid cells and affects M2 reprogramming of microglia/macrophages. Our findings demonstrate how glioma cells misuse macrophage-activating signals and redesign primarily proinflammatory signals towards their advantage to induce M2 reprogramming of tumour-infiltrating brain macrophages.
Journal Article
Group B Streptococcus GAPDH Is Released upon Cell Lysis, Associates with Bacterial Surface, and Induces Apoptosis in Murine Macrophages
2012
Glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenases (GAPDH) are cytoplasmic glycolytic enzymes that, despite lacking identifiable secretion signals, have been detected at the surface of several prokaryotic and eukaryotic organisms where they exhibit non-glycolytic functions including adhesion to host components. Group B Streptococcus (GBS) is a human commensal bacterium that has the capacity to cause life-threatening meningitis and septicemia in newborns. Electron microscopy and fluorescence-activated cell sorter (FACS) analysis demonstrated the surface localization of GAPDH in GBS. By addressing the question of GAPDH export to the cell surface of GBS strain NEM316 and isogenic mutant derivatives of our collection, we found that impaired GAPDH presence in the surface and supernatant of GBS was associated with a lower level of bacterial lysis. We also found that following GBS lysis, GAPDH can associate to the surface of many living bacteria. Finally, we provide evidence for a novel function of the secreted GAPDH as an inducer of apoptosis of murine macrophages.
Journal Article
The MUC13 cell-surface mucin protects against intestinal inflammation by inhibiting epithelial cell apoptosis
by
Jeffery, Penny L
,
Tran, Thu V
,
Sutton, Philip
in
Animals
,
Antigens, Surface - metabolism
,
Antigens, Surface - physiology
2011
Background and AimsThe MUC13 transmembrane mucin is highly and constitutively expressed in the small and large intestine. Although MUC13 polymorphisms have been associated with human inflammatory bowel diseases and susceptibility to Escherichia coli infection in pigs, the biological functions of MUC13 are unknown. This study aimed to explore whether MUC13 modulates intestinal inflammation.MethodsMuc13−/− mice were generated, phenotyped and challenged with the colitis-inducing agent, dextran sodium sulphate (DSS). Colitis was assessed by clinical symptoms and intestinal histopathology. Intestinal epithelial cell apoptosis and proliferation, macrophage infiltration and cytokine production were also quantified. Apoptosis of human LS513 intestinal epithelial cells in response to apoptotic agents, including DSS, was also measured, following knockdown of MUC13 with siRNA.ResultsMuc13−/− mice were viable, fertile and developed normally, with no spontaneous intestinal pathology except mild focal neutrophilic inflammation in the small and large intestines of old mice. In response to DSS challenge, Muc13−/− mice developed more severe acute colitis, as reflected by increased weight loss, rectal bleeding, diarrhoea and histological colitis scores compared with wild-type mice. Increased numbers of F4/80+ macrophages in inflamed mucosa of Muc13−/− mice were accompanied by increased expression of intestinal IL-1β and TNFα mRNA. Muc13−/− mice had significantly increased intestinal epithelial cell apoptosis within 3 days of DSS exposure. LS513 cells were more susceptible to DSS, actinomycin-D, ultraviolet irradiation and TRAIL-induced apoptosis when MUC13 was knocked down by siRNA.ConclusionsThese novel findings indicate a protective role for Muc13 in the colonic epithelium by inhibiting toxin-induced apoptosis and have important implications for intestinal infections, inflammatory diseases and the development of intestinal cancer.
Journal Article