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Publication : Recombinant CD200 protein does not bind activating proteins closely related to CD200 receptor.

First Author  Hatherley D Year  2005
Journal  J Immunol Volume  175
Issue  4 Pages  2469-74
PubMed ID  16081818 Mgi Jnum  J:107497
Mgi Id  MGI:3621327 Doi  10.4049/jimmunol.175.4.2469
Citation  Hatherley D, et al. (2005) Recombinant CD200 protein does not bind activating proteins closely related to CD200 receptor. J Immunol 175(4):2469-74
abstractText  CD200 (OX2) is a cell surface glycoprotein that interacts with a structurally related receptor (CD200R) expressed mainly on myeloid cells and is involved in regulation of macrophage and mast cell function. In mouse there are up to five genes related to CD200R with conflicting data as to whether they bind CD200. We show that mouse CD200 binds the inhibitory receptor CD200R with a comparable affinity (Kd = 4 microM) to those found for the rat and human CD200 CD200R interactions. CD200 gave negligible binding to the activating receptors, CD200RLa, CD200RLb, and CD200RLc, by direct analysis at the protein level using recombinant monomeric and dimeric fusion proteins or to CD200RLa and CD200RLb when expressed at the cell surface. An additional potential activating gene, CD200RLe, found in only some mouse strains also did not bind CD200. Thus, the CD200 receptor family consists of both activatory and inhibitory members like several other paired ligand receptors, such as signal regulatory protein, killer cell Ig-like receptor/KAR, LY49, dendritic cell immunoreceptor/dendritic cell immunoactivating receptor, and paired Ig-like type 2 receptor. Although the ligand for the inhibitory product is a widely distributed host protein, the ligands of the activating forms remain to be identified, and one possibility is that they are pathogen components.
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