Receptor-Mediated Monitoring of Tissue Well-Being Via Detection of Soluble Heparan Sulfate by Toll-Like Receptor 4
Mayo Clinic · Mayo Clinic in Arizona · +4 more institutions
Abstract
Perturbations to the well-being of tissues in plants and invertebrates generate fragments of endogenous molecules that are recognized by innate immune receptors. Vertebrates have homologous receptors on specialized cells such as dendritic cells, but whether these receptors respond to fragments of endogenous molecules is not known. We tested the idea that Toll-like receptors on dendritic cells might recognize polysaccharide fragments of heparan sulfate proteoglycan. Dendritic cells were found to mature in response to heparan sulfate as measured by costimulatory protein expression, morphology, and T lymphocyte stimulation, but this maturation was absent when Toll-like receptor 4 was mutated or inhibited. These…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 7.75
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 68
Authors
4- GBGeoffrey B. JohnsonCorresponding
Mayo Clinic, Mayo Clinic in Arizona, Mayo Clinic in Florida
- GJGregory J. Brunn
Mayo Clinic, Mayo Clinic in Arizona, Mayo Clinic in Florida
- YKYuzo Kodaira
Tsukuba Memorial Hospital, Nippon Medical School
- JLJeffrey L. Platt
Mayo Clinic, WinnMed, Mayo Clinic in Arizona, Mayo Clinic in Florida
Topics & keywords
- Receptor
- Heparan sulfate
- Cell biology
- Biology
- Endogeny
- Immune system
- Proteoglycan
- Innate immune system
- Life below water