Expression of multilectin receptors and comparative FITC-dextran uptake by human dendritic cells


Autoria(s): Kato, M.; Neil, T. K.; Fearnley, D. B.; McLellan, A. D.; Vuckovic, S.; Hart, D. N. J.
Data(s)

01/01/2000

Resumo

Dendritic cells (DC) are potent antigen-presenting cells and understanding their mechanisms of antigen uptake is important for loading DC with antigen for immunotherapy. The multilectin receptors, DEC-205 and macrophage mannose receptor (MMR), are potential antigen-uptake receptors; therefore, we examined their expression and FITC-dextran uptake by various human DC preparations. The RT-PCR analysis detected low levels of DEC-205 mRNA in immature blood DC, Langerhans cells (LC) and immature monocyte-derived DC (Mo-DC), Its mRNA expression increased markedly upon activation, indicating that DEC-205 is an activation-associated molecule. In Mo-DC, the expression of cell-surface DEC-205 increased markedly during maturation. In blood DC, however, the cell-surface expression of DEC-205 did not change during activation, suggesting the presence of a large intracellular pool of DEC-205 or post-transcriptional regulation. Immature Mo-DC expressed abundant MMR, but its expression diminished upon maturation. Blood DC and LC did not express detectable levels of the MMR, FITC-dextran uptake by both immature and activated blood DC was 30- to 70-fold less than that of LC, immature Mo-DC and macrophages. In contrast to immature Mo-DC, the FITC-dextran uptake by LC was not inhibited effectively by mannose, an inhibitor for MMR-mediated FITC-dextran uptake. Thus, unlike Mo-DC, blood DC and LC do not use the MMR for carbohydrate-conjugated antigen uptake and alternative receptors may yet be defined on these DC. Therefore, DEC-205 may have a different specificity as an antigen uptake receptor or contribute to an alternative DC function.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:85277

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Oxford University Press

Palavras-Chave #Immunology #Dec-205 #Langerhans Cells #Macrophage Mannose Receptor #Monocyte-derived Dendritic Cells #Macrophage Mannose Receptor #Monoclonal-antibody Nldc-145 #Langerhans Cells #Gp200-mr6 Molecule #Peripheral-blood #T-cells #Plasminogen-activator #Tissue Distribution #Protein Antigens #Soluble-antigen #C1 #320200 Immunology #730102 Immune system and allergy
Tipo

Journal Article