299 resultados para Sexual Differentiation
em Université de Lausanne, Switzerland
Resumo:
The white Barn Owl subspecies (Tyto alba alba) is found in southern Europe and the reddish-brown subspecies (T a. guttata) in northern and eastern Europe. In central Europe, the two subspecies interbreed producing a large range of phenotypic variants. Because of the different ratios of the subspecies in different geographic regions, we predict that genetic variation should be greater in Switzerland than in Hungary. We tested this hypothesis by measuring genetic variation with the RAPD method. As predicted, the genetic differentiation within a Swiss population of Barn Owls was significantly greater than the variation within a Hungarian population. This suggests that gene flow is greater in central Europe than at the eastern limit of the Barn Owl distribution in Hungary. In both countries genetic variation was more pronounced in females than in males. As in other birds, this is probably because female Barn Owls are less philopatric than males. The number of migrants between Hungary and Switzerland is ca. 1 individual per generation; if calculated separately for the sexes, then 0.525 for males and ca. I for females (Nm values). The difference in the number of migrants between genders again is likely a consequence of higher male philopatry. The sexual differentiation is greater in the Swiss population than in the Hungarian and the genetic substructuring of the populations of the species is substantial. The reason for the considerable population substructuring could be the nonmigratory behavior and socially monogamous pairing of the species, as well as the geographical barriers (Alps) between the populations examined.
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The transformer (tra) gene is a key regulator in the signalling hierarchy controlling all aspects of somatic sexual differentiation in Drosophila and other insects. Here, we show that six of the seven sequenced ants have two copies of tra. Surprisingly, the two paralogues are always more similar within species than among species. Comparative sequence analyses indicate that this pattern is owing to the ongoing concerted evolution after an ancestral duplication rather than independent duplications in each of the six species. In particular, there was strong support for inter-locus recombination between the paralogues of the ant Atta cephalotes. In the five species where the location of paralogues is known, they are adjacent to each other in four cases and separated by only few genes in the fifth case. Because there have been extensive genomic rearrangements in these lineages, this suggests selection acting to conserve their synteny. In three species, we also find a signature of positive selection in one of the paralogues. In three bee species where information is available, the tra gene is also duplicated, the copies are adjacent and in at least one species there was recombination between paralogues. These results suggest that concerted evolution plays an adaptive role in the evolution of this gene family.
Resumo:
Turning biases have been associated with unbalanced hemispheric dopaminergic activity, and this activity has been correlated with cue-directed behaviors. Moreover, a sexual differentiation in hippocampal dopaminergic receptors following learning has been shown. In humans, pointing responses towards the starting point is commonly used to assess the accuracy of direction estimation after locomotion. Thus, it may be of interest for the field of spatial cognition to explore human sex differences in spontaneous turning bias when a body rotation is required. To this end, male and female blindfolded subjects were guided in a linear displacement and asked to rotate in order to point in the direction of the starting position. The main finding was a massive difference between men and women. 80% of women showed a turning bias to the right when 69% of men showed a bias to the left. Moreover, these preferences were not correlated with handedness. These results suggest basic preferences associated to sex might influence male and female performance in spatial cognition. They also suggest experimental procedures may be biased in favor of male or female strategies. Therefore, such preferences should be considered in order to gain further insight into the development of more balanced procedures.
Resumo:
UNLABELLED: Pneumocystis species are fungal parasites of mammal lungs showing host specificity. Pneumocystis jirovecii colonizes humans and causes severe pneumonia in immunosuppressed individuals. In the absence of in vitro cultures, the life cycle of these fungi remains poorly known. Sexual reproduction probably occurs, but the system of this process and the mating type (MAT) genes involved are not characterized. In the present study, we used comparative genomics to investigate the issue in P. jirovecii and Pneumocystis carinii, the species infecting rats, as well as in their relative Taphrina deformans. We searched sex-related genes using 103 sequences from the relative Schizosaccharomyces pombe as queries. Genes homologous to several sex-related role categories were identified in all species investigated, further supporting sexuality in these organisms. Extensive in silico searches identified only three putative MAT genes in each species investigated (matMc, matMi, and matPi). In P. jirovecii, these genes clustered on the same contig, proving their contiguity in the genome. This organization seems compatible neither with heterothallism, because two different MAT loci on separate DNA molecules would have been detected, nor with secondary homothallism, because the latter involves generally more MAT genes. Consistently, we did not detect cis-acting sequences for mating type switching in secondary homothallism, and PCR revealed identical MAT genes in P. jirovecii isolates from six patients. A strong synteny of the genomic region surrounding the putative MAT genes exists between the two Pneumocystis species. Our results suggest the hypothesis that primary homothallism is the system of reproduction of Pneumocystis species and T. deformans. IMPORTANCE: Sexual reproduction among fungi can involve a single partner (homothallism) or two compatible partners (heterothallism). We investigated the issue in three pathogenic fungal relatives: Pneumocystis jirovecii, which causes severe pneumonia in immunocompromised humans; Pneumocystis carinii, which infects rats; and the plant pathogen Taphrina deformans. The nature, the number, and the organization within the genome of the genes involved in sexual reproduction were determined. The three species appeared to harbor a single genomic region gathering only three genes involved in sexual differentiation, an organization which is compatible with sexual reproduction involving a single partner. These findings illuminate the strategy adopted by fungal pathogens to infect their hosts.
Resumo:
Arthropods exhibit a large variety of sex determination systems both at the chromosomal and molecular level. Male heterogamety, female heterogamety, and haplodiploidy occur frequently, but partially different genes are involved. Endosymbionts, such as Wolbachia, Cardinium,Rickettsia, and Spiroplasma, can manipulate host reproduction and sex determination. Four major reproductive manipulation types are distinguished: cytoplasmic incompatibility, thelytokous parthenogenesis, male killing, and feminization. In this review, the effects of these manipulation types and how they interfere with arthropod sex determination in terms of host developmental timing, alteration of sex determination, and modification of sexual differentiation pathways are summarized. Transitions between different manipulation types occur frequently which suggests that they are based on similar molecular processes. It is also discussed how mechanisms of reproductive manipulation and host sex determination can be informative on each other, with a special focus on haplodiploidy. Future directions on how the study of endosymbiotic manipulation of host reproduction can be key to further studies of arthropod sex determination are shown.
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Htr1a is one of the most widespread serotonin receptor across the brain, strongly expressed in CAI region of hippocampus. Our laboratory studies the phenotypic alteration in 5HTla- deficient mice (Htr1aK0), characterized an abnormal anxious-like behavior. Our aim is to evaluate the regulation of this cognitive process by understanding the circuitry involved. This phenotype sets up early during development and has durable effect in adulthood. Our laboratory showed that adult Htr1aK0 male mice displaying exuberant dendritic growth of oblique dendrites in a specific layer of a CAI pyramidal neurons, the stratum radiatum. Application of drugs in organotypic cultures and by in vivo injections revealed that GluN2B, a subunit of NMDA receptor highly expressed during development, is responsible for this dendritic exuberance. Immunohistochemistry highlighted in particular a synaptic enrichment of GluN2B in stratum radiatum of Htr1aK0 CAI pyramidal neurons at puberty. Finally, original analysis of Htr1aK0 mouse behavior showed a different response to anxiety between male and female. Htr1a activation down-regulates the CaMKII activity in the CAI pyramidal neurons. CaMKII directly favors the membrane conductance and stability of GluN2B at the synapse. In the context of the Htr1aK0 mouse, GluN2B is the final common pathway of our phenotype. This subunit is well known to regulate the threshold of LTD/LTP and the dendritogenesis during development. In my thesis, I establish a link between the gender differences in the morphology and the physiology in the Htr1aK0 mice during development to understand how these characteristics shape the circuit with prominent cognitive impacts in adulthood. My study highlighted that during development, Htr1aK0 male mice show a constant increase of the dendritic growth of oblique dendrites from early ages until adulthood associated with an increased physiological impact of altered GluN2A/GluN2B ratio. Whereas during puberty, synaptic contribution of GluN2B to NMDA response is higher in Htr1aK0 compared to WT male mice, this ratio comes back to normal values towards adulthood. However, this recovery of the ratio of GluN2A/GluN2B located at the synaptic level is concomitant with the lateral diffusion of excess GluN2B subunits, leading to extrasynaptic enrichment. The main impact was a lowering of the LTP threshold characterized by strong increased potentiation of synaptic strength after 5 Hz low frequency stimulation. Moreover, the extrasynaptic GluN2B overexpression leads to a shift of the maturation phase switch explaining the exuberant morphology. However, Htr1aK0 females characterized during the 3 first weeks of development by an increase of the dendritic growth of oblique dendrites showed starting at puberty that the dendrite arborization returns progressively to WT values. The physiological impact of GluN2B was investigated and directly linked to this morphology, since Htr1aK0 female mice does not show alteration of the synaptic strength during development. These observations show a compensation occurring in Htr1aK0 female, responsible for a rescue of the phenotype morphologically, physiologically and to be tested behaviorally. We highlighted then the biological processes underlying this compensation. During development, sexual hormones such as testosterone and estrogen are responsible to induce sexual differentiation of specific brain regions. I demonstrated that estrogen, but not testosterone, was able to reduce both in vitro and in vivo the dendritic arborization early during development, through activation of GPER-1, a G-coupled protein estrogen receptor, which phenocopy the activation of Htr1a by reducing GluN2B conductance and stability. I then identified a pathway, parallel to Htr1a, able to regulate GluN2B and responsible for the morphological and physiological phenotype in Htr1aK0 female mice. The specific rise of estrogen occurring at puberty in female is responsible for the compensation observed and induces a late rescue of the Htr1aK0 phenotype by activation GPER-1. -- Htr1a est un des récepteurs à la sérotonine les plus répandus dans le cerveau, fortement exprimé dans la région CAI de l'hippocampe. Notre laboratoire étudie les altérations phénotypiques de souris déficientes pour ce récepteur (Htr1aK0), caractérisées par un comportement avec des traits anxieux. Notre objectif est d'évaluer la régulation de ces processus cognitifs en comprenant les connexions nerveuses impliquées. Ce phénotype se met en place tôt au cours du développement et présente un effet durable à l'âge adulte. Notre laboratoire a montré que les souris Htr1aK0 mâles adultes se caractérisent par une croissance exubérante des dendrites obliques dans une couche spécifique des neurones pyramidaux du CAI, le stratum radiatum. L'application de drogues sur cultures organotypiques et par injections in vivo ont révélé que GluN2B, une sous-unité du récepteur NMDA fortement exprimée au cours du développement, est responsable de cette exubérance dendritique. Des expériences d'immunohistochimie ont notamment mis en évidence un enrichissement synaptique de GluN2B durant la puberté dans le stratum radiatum des neurones de la région CAI des souris Htr1aK0. Finalement, l'analyse originale du comportement des souris Htr1aK0 a montré une différence de réponse à l'anxiété entre mâles et femelles. L'activation de Htr1a diminue l'activité de la CaMKII dans les neurones pyramidaux du CAI. La CaMKII favorise directement la conductance et la stabilité de la sous-unité GluN2B à la synapse. Dans le contexte de la souris Htr1aK0, GluN2B est le « médiateur » de notre phénotype. Cette sous-unité est particulièrement connue pour réguler le seuil de LTD-LTP ainsi que la dendritogénèse durant le développement. Dans ma thèse, j'ai établi le lien entre les différences dépendant du genre dans la morphologie et physiologie des souris Htr1aK0 au cours du développement pour comprendre comment ces caractéristiques modulent le circuit accompagnés d'impacts cognitifs visibles à l'âge adulte. Mon étude a mis en évidence que durant le développement, les souris mâles Htr1aK0 montrent une constante augmentation de la croissance des dendrites obliques entre les premières semaines et l'âge adulte associée à une augmentation de l'impact physiologique du ratio GluN2A/GluN2B altéré. Alors que durant la puberté, la contribution synaptique de GluN2B à la réponse NMDA est plus haute chez la souris mâle Htr1aK0 que le WT, ce ratio revient à des valeurs normales à l'âge adulte. Cependant, cette récupération de l'expression du récepteur au niveau synaptique est concomitante avec la diffusion des sous-unités GluN2B excédantes, amenant alors à un enrichissement extrasynaptique. Le principal impact est une diminution du seuil de la LTP caractérisée par une forte potentiation de la plasticité après une stimulation basse fréquence à 5 Hz. De plus, la surexpression des GluN2B extrasynaptiques conduit à un décalage de la bascule à la phase de maturation, expliquant la morphologie dendritique exubérante. Cependant, les femelles Htr1aK0 initialement caractérisées pendant les 3 premières semaines du développement par une augmentation de la croissance des dendrites obliques montrent à partir de la puberté que cette arborisation dendritique retourne à des valeurs WT. L'impact physiologique de GLuN2B a été investigué et mis en lien avec cette morphologie, étant donné que les femelles Htr1aK0 ne montrent pas d'altération de la plasticité durant le développement. Ces observations montrent une compensation se produisant chez la femelle Htr1aK0, responsable d'une récupération du phénotype morphologique, physiologique et peut-être comportemental. Nous avons souligné les processus biologiques sous-jacent à cette compensation. Au cours du développement, les hormones sexuelles telles que la testostérone et l'estrogène sont responsables de la différentiation sexuelle de régions du cerveau spécifiques. J'ai démontré que l'estrogène, mais pas la testostérone, était capable de réduire in vitro et in vivo l'arborisation dendritique tôt dans le développement au travers de l'activation du récepteur GPER-1, un récepteur aux estrogènes couplés à un protéine G, qui phénocopie l'activation de Htr1a en réduisant la conductance et la stabilité de GluN2B à la membrane. J'ai identifié une voie de signalisation parallèle à celle de Htr1a, capable de réguler GluN2B et responsable du phénotype morphologique et physiologique de la souris femelle Htr1aK0. La montée spécifique d'estrogène se déroulant à la puberté chez la femelle est responsable de cette compensation et implique une récupération tardive du phénotype Htr1aK0 par l'activation de GPER-1.
Resumo:
The Spanish sand racer (Psammodromus hispanicus) has been recently split into three distinct species: P. hispanicus, P. edwardsianus, and P. occidentalis. Some morphological differences have been reported but there is as yet no description allowing unambiguous identification of the three species. Here, we describe differentiation in body measurements, scalation traits, and colour traits as well as in the degree of sexual dimorphism. Our results show that P. edwardsianus can be easily distinguished by the presence of a supralabial scale below the subocular scale, which is absent in the other two species. Psammodromus hispanicus and P. occidentalis can be distinguished by the number of femoral pores, throat scales and ocelli, and the relative width of the anal scale. The degree of sexual size dimorphism and sexual colour dimorphism substantially differs among species, suggesting that different scenarios of sexual and natural selection may exist for each species. Moreover, sexually selected traits (nuptial colouration, ocelli, and femoral pores) significantly differ among species, suggesting that visual and chemical communication may also differ among species. Such differences could prevent reproduction and gene flow at secondary contact zones, potentially reinforcing isolation and speciation within this group of lizards.
Resumo:
In sharp contrast with birds and mammals, sex-determination systems in ectothermic vertebrates are often highly dynamic and sometimes multifactorial. Both environmental and genetic effects have been documented in common frogs (Rana temporaria). One genetic linkage group, mapping to the largest pair of chromosomes and harbouring the candidate sex-determining gene Dmrt1, associates with sex in several populations throughout Europe, but association varies both within and among populations. Here, we show that sex association at this linkage group differs among populations along a 1500-km transect across Sweden. Genetic differentiation between sexes is strongest (FST = 0.152) in a northern-boreal population, where male-specific alleles and heterozygote excesses (FIS = -0.418 in males, +0.025 in females) testify to a male-heterogametic system and lack of X-Y recombination. In the southernmost population (nemoral climate), in contrast, sexes share the same alleles at the same frequencies (FST = 0.007 between sexes), suggesting unrestricted recombination. Other populations show intermediate levels of sex differentiation, with males falling in two categories: some cluster with females, while others display male-specific Y haplotypes. This polymorphism may result from differences between populations in the patterns of X-Y recombination, co-option of an alternative sex-chromosome pair, or a mixed sex-determination system where maleness is controlled either by genes or by environment depending on populations or families. We propose approaches to test among these alternative models, to disentangle the effects of climate and phylogeography on the latitudinal trend, and to sort out how this polymorphism relates to the 'sexual races' described in common frogs in the 1930s.
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BACKGROUND AND AIMS: The study of local adaptation in plant reproductive traits has received substantial attention in short-lived species, but studies conducted on forest trees are scarce. This lack of research on long-lived species represents an important gap in our knowledge, because inferences about selection on the reproduction and life history of short-lived species cannot necessarily be extrapolated to trees. This study considers whether the size for first reproduction is locally adapted across a broad geographical range of the Mediterranean conifer species Pinus pinaster. In particular, the study investigates whether this monoecious species varies genetically among populations in terms of whether individuals start to reproduce through their male function, their female function or both sexual functions simultaneously. Whether differences among populations could be attributed to local adaptation across a climatic gradient is then considered. METHODS: Male and female reproduction and growth were measured during early stages of sexual maturity of a P. pinaster common garden comprising 23 populations sampled across the species range. Generalized linear mixed models were used to assess genetic variability of early reproductive life-history traits. Environmental correlations with reproductive life-history traits were tested after controlling for neutral genetic structure provided by 12 nuclear simple sequence repeat markers. KEY RESULTS: Trees tended to reproduce first through their male function, at a size (height) that varied little among source populations. The transition to female reproduction was slower, showed higher levels of variability and was negatively correlated with vegetative growth traits. Several female reproductive traits were correlated with a gradient of growth conditions, even after accounting for neutral genetic structure, with populations from more unfavourable sites tending to commence female reproduction at a lower individual size. CONCLUSIONS: The study represents the first report of genetic variability among populations for differences in the threshold size for first reproduction between male and female sexual functions in a tree species. The relatively uniform size at which individuals begin reproducing through their male function probably represents the fact that pollen dispersal is also relatively invariant among sites. However, the genetic variability in the timing of female reproduction probably reflects environment-dependent costs of cone production. The results also suggest that early sex allocation in this species might evolve under constraints that do not apply to other conifers.
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Abstract Island biogeography has provided fundamental hypotheses in population genetics, ecology and evolutionary biology. Insular populations usually face different feeding conditions, predation pressure, intraspecific and interspecific competition than continental populations. This so-called island syndrome can promote the evolution of specific phenotypes like a small (or large) body size and a light (or dark) colouration as well as influence the evolution of sexual dimorphism. To examine whether insularity leads to phenotypic differentiation in a consistent way in a worldwide-distributed nonmigratory species, we compared body size, body shape and colouration between insular and continental barn owl (Tyto alba) populations by controlling indirectly for phylogeny. This species is suitable because it varies in pheomelanin-based colouration from reddish-brown to white, and it displays eumelanic black spots for which the number and size vary between individuals, populations and species. Females are on average darker pheomelanic and display more and larger eumelanic spots than males. Our results show that on islands barn owls exhibited smaller and fewer eumelanic spots and lighter pheomelanic colouration, and shorter wings than on continents. Sexual dimorphism in pheomelanin-based colouration was less pronounced on islands than continents (i.e. on islands males tended to be as pheomelanic as females), and on small islands owls were redder pheomelanic and smaller in size than owls living on larger islands. Sexual dimorphism in the size of eumelanic spots was more pronounced (i.e. females displayed much larger spots than males) in barn owls living on islands located further away from a continent. Our study indicates that insular conditions drive the evolution towards a lower degree of eumelanism, smaller body size and affects the evolution of sexual dichromatism in melanin-based colour traits. The effect of insularity was more pronounced on body size and shape than on melanic traits.
Resumo:
Variation in queen number alters the genetic structure of social insect colonies, which in turn affects patterns of kin-selected conflict and cooperation. Theory suggests that shifts from single- to multiple-queen colonies are often associated with other changes in the breeding system, such as higher queen turnover, more local mating, and restricted dispersal. These changes may restrict gene flow between the two types of colonies and it has been suggested that this might ultimately lead to sympatric speciation. We performed a detailed microsatellite analysis of a large population of the ant Formica selysi, which revealed extensive variation in social structure, with 71 colonies headed by a single queen and 41 by multiple queens. This polymorphism in social structure appeared stable over time, since little change in the number of queens per colony was detected over a five-year period. Apart from queen number, single- and multiple-queen colonies had very similar breeding systems. Queen turnover was absent or very low in both types of colonies. Single- and multiple-queen colonies exhibited very small but significant levels of inbreeding, which indicates a slight deviation from random mating at a local scale and suggests that a small proportion of queens mate with related males. For both types of colonies, there was very little genetic structuring above the level of the nest, with no sign of isolation by distance. These similarities in the breeding systems were associated with a complete lack of genetic differentiation between single- and multiple-queen colonies, which provides no support for the hypothesis that change in queen number leads to restricted gene flow between social forms. Overall, this study suggests that the higher rates of queen turnover, local mating, and population structuring that are often associated with multiple-queen colonies do not appear when single- and multiple-queen colonies still coexist within the same population, but build up over time in populations consisting mostly of multiple-queen colonies.
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RORα is a retinoid-related orphan nuclear receptor that regulates inflammation, lipid metabolism, and cellular differentiation of several non-epithelial tissues. In spite of its high expression in skin epithelium, its functions in this tissue remain unclear. Using gain- and loss-of-function approaches to alter RORα gene expression in human keratinocytes (HKCs), we have found that this transcription factor functions as a regulator of epidermal differentiation. Among the 4 RORα isoforms, RORα4 is prominently expressed by keratinocytes in a manner that increases with differentiation. In contrast, RORα levels are significantly lower in skin squamous cell carcinoma tumors (SCCs) and cell lines. Increasing the levels of RORα4 in HKCs enhanced the expression of structural proteins associated with early and late differentiation, as well as genes involved in lipid barrier formation. Gene silencing of RORα impaired the ability of keratinocytes to differentiate in an in vivo epidermal cyst model. The pro-differentiation function of RORα is mediated at least in part by FOXN1, a well-known pro-differentiation transcription factor that we establish as a novel direct target of RORα in keratinocytes. Our results point to RORα as a novel node in the keratinocyte differentiation network and further suggest that the identification of RORα ligands may prove useful for treating skin disorders that are associated with abnormal keratinocyte differentiation, including cancer.
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CD4⁺ T helper cells are playing critical roles in host defense to pathogens and in the maintenance of immune homeostasis. Naïve CD4⁺T cells, upon antigen-specific recognition, receive signals to differentiate into distinct effector T helper cell subsets characterized by their pattern of cytokine production and specific immune functions. A tight balance between these different subsets ensures proper control of the immune response. There is increasing evidence revealing an important role for Notch signaling in the regulation of CD4⁺T helper cell differentiation or function in the periphery. However, the exact mechanisms involved remain unclear and appear contradictory. In this review, we summarize current knowledge and discuss recent advances in the field to reconcile different views on the role of Notch signaling in the differentiation of functional T helper subsets.
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Background and Aims The males and females of many dioecious plant species differ from one another in important life-history traits, such as their size. If male and female reproductive functions draw on different resources, for example, one should expect males and females to display different allocation strategies as they grow. Importantly, these strategies may differ not only between the two sexes, but also between plants of different age and therefore size. Results are presented from an experiment that asks whether males and females of Mercurialis annua, an annual plant with indeterminate growth, differ over time in their allocation of two potentially limiting resources (carbon and nitrogen) to vegetative (below-and above-ground) and reproductive tissues.Methods Comparisons were made of the temporal patterns of biomass allocation to shoots, roots and reproduction and the nitrogen content in the leaves between the sexes of M. annua by harvesting plants of each sex after growth over different periods of time.Key Results and Conclusions Males and females differed in their temporal patterns of allocation. Males allocated more to reproduction than females at early stages, but this trend was reversed at later stages. Importantly, males allocated proportionally more of their biomass towards roots at later stages, but the roots of females were larger in absolute terms. The study points to the important role played by both the timing of resource deployment and the relative versus absolute sizes of the sinks and sources in sexual dimorphism of an annual plant.
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Airway epithelial cells were shown to drive the differentiation of monocytes into dendritic cells (DCs) with a suppressive phenotype. In this study, we investigated the impact of virus-induced inflammatory mediator production on the development of DCs. Monocyte differentiation into functional DCs, as reflected by the expression of CD11c, CD123, BDCA-4, and DC-SIGN and the capacity to activate T cells, was similar for respiratory syncytial virus (RSV)-infected and mock-infected BEAS-2B and A549 cells. RSV-conditioned culture media resulted in a partially mature DC phenotype, but failed to up-regulate CD80, CD83, CD86, and CCR7, and failed to release proinflammatory mediators upon Toll-like receptor (TLR) triggering. Nevertheless, these DCs were able to maintain an antiviral response by the release of Type I IFN. Collectively, these data indicate that the airway epithelium maintains an important suppressive DC phenotype under the inflammatory conditions induced by infection with RSV.