We investigated the role of SIGNR1 in the recognition of Candida albicans and the subsequent cellular oxidative burst response. Soluble SIGNR1 (sSIGNR1) tetramer bound equally to zymosan and both heat-killed (HK) and live C. albicans in an EDTA-sensitive manner, whereas sDectin-1 tetramer predominantly bound to zymosan and HK-microbes in an EDTA-independent manner. In cellular response, enhanced oxidative burst was observed in RAW264.7 cells expressing SIGNR1 (RAW-SIGNR1) compared with RAW-control cells upon stimulation with HK-C. albicans and zymosan. This response was independent of TLR2 and the cytosolic portion of SIGNR1 but dependent on the recognition by SIGNR1 via carbohydrate recognition domain. Antagonistic laminarin and anti-Dectin-1 mAb cooperatively reduced the response with mannan and anti-SIGNR1 mAb, respectively, although they had no effect by themselves. Moreover, oxidative response and bactericidal activity largely relied on Syk-mediated signaling. RAW-SIGNR1 cells not only captured microbes more efficiently but also showed higher responses than RAW-control cells. Similar enhanced responses were observed in SIGNR-1-expressing resident peritoneal M/. Interestingly, Dectin-1 was recruited to the phagosomal membrane upon the stimulation and physically associated with SIGNR1. These results suggest that SIGNR1 plays a significant role in inducing oxidative response to C. albicans by Syk-dependent signaling, possibly through Dectin-1.Key words: C. albicans . Dectin-1 . Macrophages . SIGNR1 . TLR2 IntroductionInnate immunity is a crucial host defense system that eliminates pathogens as they initiate an infection and leads to the subsequent initiation of the adaptive immune response [1]. The system consists of germline-encoded genes, i.e. toll-like receptors (TLRs) [2] [8][9][10][11][12]. Microbe-mediated stimulation of Dectin-1 results in cellular oxidative burst and cytokine production through its ITAM and the Syk kinase pathway [13,14]. In addition, Dectin-1 has been shown to function collaboratively with TLR2 to stimulate cytokine production [15] and Th17/Treg induction [16].hDC-SIGN recognizes mannose and fucose moieties in the surface of a variety of microbes and viruses, such as Mycobacteria, Leishmania, Salmonella, Candida species, HIV, HCV, dengue virus, CMV, Ebola virus and Sindbis virus (refer to [17]). However, pathogens, i.e. HIV and HCV, have also found ways to subvert and use hDC-SIGN to their advantage [18,19]. Mycobacterium tuberculosis and HIV also target hDC-SIGN in order to upregulate DC production of the immunosuppressive cytokine IL-10 through Raf-1 kinase activation, which induces acetylation of the NF-kB p65 subunit in the presence of co-signaling from TLR4 [20].Mice have eight hDC-SIGN homologues [21,22]. One of these homologues, SIGNR1, has been shown to be expressed on particular Mf subsets in the marginal zone of the spleen, medulla of the lymph nodes and the peritoneal cavity [23][24][25] and to possess mannosebinding activities like hDC-SIGN. SIGNR1 recognizes not only vari...
SIGNR1, a mouse C-type lectin, binds various pathogens, including Candida albicans. In this study, we explore the impact of SIGNR1 in the recognition of C. albicans/zymosan and the subsequent tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-α production using SIGNR1-transfected RAW264.7 (RAW-SIGNR1) cells and resident peritoneal macrophages. Compared with RAW-control cells, RAW-SIGNR1 cells dramatically enhanced TNF-α production upon the stimulation with heat-killed C. albicans and zymosan. Recognition of microbes via carbohydrate recognition domain (CRD) of SIGNR1 was crucial for the enhanced TNF-α production. Consistently, such an enhancement was significantly decreased by anti-SIGNR1 mAb. Laminarin, antagonistic Dectin-1 ligand, cooperated to further diminish the response, although no effect was observed by itself in RAW-SIGNR1 cells. However, it moderately reduced the response of RAW-control cells. Zymosan depleted of toll-like receptor (TLR) ligands decreased the response, even though it was recognized by SIGNR1 and Dectin-1. Moreover, antagonistic anti-TLR2 abolished the response, suggesting that TNF-α production largely relies on TLR2-mediated signaling. Resident peritoneal macrophages expressing SIGNR1 predominantly captured zymosan injected intra-peritoneally and produced TNF-α, which was dependent on TLR2 and partly inhibited by anti-SIGNR1 mAb. Finally, physical association of SIGNR1 with the extracellular portion of TLR2 through CRD was confirmed by immunoprecipitation using various deletion mutants. These results suggest that SIGNR1 recognizing microbes participates in the enhanced TNF-α production by Mϕ in cooperation with TLR2.
d C-type lectin SIGNR1 directly recognizes Candida albicans and zymosan and has been considered to share properties of polysaccharide recognition with human DC-SIGN (hDC-SIGN). However, the precise specificity of SIGNR1 and the difference from that of hDC-SIGN remain to be elucidated. We prepared soluble forms of SIGNR1 and hDC-SIGN and conducted experiments to examine their respective specificities. Soluble SIGNR1 (sSIGNR1) bound several types of live C. albicans clinical isolate strains in an EDTA-sensitive manner. Inhibition analyses of sSIGNR1 binding by glycans from various yeast strains demonstrated that SIGNR1 preferentially recognizes N-glycan ␣-mannose side chains in Candida mannoproteins, as reported in hDC-SIGN. Unlike shDC-SIGN, however, sSIGNR1 recognized not only Saccharomyces cerevisiae, but also C. albicans J-1012 glycan, even after ␣-mannosidase treatment that leaves only 1,2-mannose-capped ␣-mannose side chains. In addition, glycomicroarray analyses showed that sSIGNR1 binds mannans from C. albicans and S. cerevisiae but does not recognize Lewis a/b/x/y antigen polysaccharides as in shDC-SIGN. Consistent with these results, RAW264.7 cells expressing hDC-SIGN in which the carbohydrate recognition domain (CRD) was replaced with that of SIGNR1 (RAW-chimera) produced comparable amounts of interleukin 10 (IL-10) in response to glycans from C. albicans and S. cerevisiae, but those expressing hDC-SIGN produced less IL-10 in response to S. cerevisiae than C. albicans. Furthermore, RAW-hDC-SIGN cells remarkably reduced IL-10 production after ␣-mannosidase treatment compared with RAW-chimera cells. These results indicate that SIGNR1 recognizes C. albicans/yeast through a specificity partly distinct from that of its homologue hDC-SIGN.
BackgroundUlcerative colitis, an inflammatory bowel disease, is associated with the massive infiltration of neutrophils. Although the initial infiltration of neutrophils is beneficial for killing bacteria, it is presumed that persistent infiltration causes tissue damage by releasing antibacterial products as well as inflammatory cytokines. A murine C-type lectin receptor, dendritic cell immunoreceptor 1 (Dcir1), is expressed on CD11b+ myeloid cells, such as macrophages, dendritic cells and neutrophils. It was reported that Dcir1 is required to maintain homeostasis of the immune system to prevent autoimmunity, but it is also involved in the development of infectious disease resulting in the enhanced severity of cerebral malaria. However, the role of Dcir1 in intestinal immune responses during colitis remains unclear. In this study, we investigated the role of Dcir1 in intestinal inflammation using an experimental colitis model induced with dextran sodium sulfate (DSS).ResultsIn contrast to wild type (WT) mice, Dcir1−/− mice exhibited mild body weight loss during the course of DSS colitis accompanied by reduced colonic inflammation. Dcir1 deficiency caused a reduced accumulation of neutrophils in the inflamed colon on day 5 of DSS colitis compared with WT mice. Consistently, the production of a neutrophil-attracting chemokine, MIP-2, was also decreased in the Dcir1−/− colon compared with the WT colon on day 5. There were fewer myeloperoxidase-positive neutrophils in the inflamed colon of Dcir1−/− mice than in that of WT mice. Moreover, bone marrow neutrophils from Dcir1−/− mice produced less reactive oxygen species (ROS) by lipopolysaccharide stimulation than those from WT mice. This suggests that Dcir1 deficiency decreases the accumulation of tissue destructive neutrophils during DSS colitis.ConclusionDcir1 enhances the pathogenesis of DSS colitis by altering neutrophil recruitment and their functions.
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