Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

The human β‐glucan receptor is widely expressed and functionally equivalent to murine Dectin‐1 on primary cells

2005; Wiley; Volume: 35; Issue: 5 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1002/eji.200425725

ISSN

1521-4141

Autores

Janet A. Willment, Andrew S. J. Marshall, Delyth M. Reid, David L. Williams, Simon Y. C. Wong, Siamon Gordon, Gordon D. Brown,

Tópico(s)

Fungal Infections and Studies

Resumo

We identified the C-type-lectin-like receptor, Dectin-1, as the major receptor for fungal beta-glucans on murine macrophages and have demonstrated that it plays a significant role in the cellular response to these carbohydrates. Using two novel, isoform-specific mAb, we show here that human Dectin-1, the beta-glucan receptor (betaGR), is widely expressed and present on all monocyte populations as well as macrophages, DC, neutrophils and eosinophils. This receptor is also expressed on B cells and a subpopulation of T cells, demonstrating that human Dectin-1 is not myeloid restricted. Both major functional betaGR isoforms - betaGR-A and betaGR-B - were expressed by these cell populations in peripheral blood; however, only betaGR-B was significantly expressed on mature monocyte-derived macrophages and immature DC, suggesting cell-specific control of isoform expression. Inflammatory cells, recruited in vivo using a new skin-window technique, demonstrated that Dectin-1 expression was not significantly modulated on macrophages during inflammation, but is decreased on recruited granulocytes. Despite previous reports detailing the involvement of other beta-glucan receptors on mature human macrophages, we have demonstrated that Dectin-1 acted as the major beta-glucan receptor on these cells and contributed to the inflammatory response to these carbohydrates.

Referência(s)