|  Help  |  About  |  Contact Us

Publication : Identification of a dendritic cell receptor that couples sensing of necrosis to immunity.

First Author  Sancho D Year  2009
Journal  Nature Volume  458
Issue  7240 Pages  899-903
PubMed ID  19219027 Mgi Jnum  J:147472
Mgi Id  MGI:3840764 Doi  10.1038/nature07750
Citation  Sancho D, et al. (2009) Identification of a dendritic cell receptor that couples sensing of necrosis to immunity. Nature 458(7240):899-903
abstractText  Injury or impaired clearance of apoptotic cells leads to the pathological accumulation of necrotic corpses, which induce an inflammatory response that initiates tissue repair. In addition, antigens present in necrotic cells can sometimes provoke a specific immune response and it has been argued that necrosis could explain adaptive immunity in seemingly infection-free situations, such as after allograft transplantation or in spontaneous and therapy-induced tumour rejection. In the mouse, the CD8alpha+ subset of dendritic cells phagocytoses dead cell remnants and cross-primes CD8+ T cells against cell-associated antigens. Here we show that CD8alpha+ dendritic cells use CLEC9A (also known as DNGR-1), a recently-characterized C-type lectin, to recognize a preformed signal that is exposed on necrotic cells. Loss or blockade of CLEC9A does not impair the uptake of necrotic cell material by CD8+ dendritic cells, but specifically reduces cross-presentation of dead-cell-associated antigens in vitro and decreases the immunogenicity of necrotic cells in vivo. The function of CLEC9A requires a key tyrosine residue in its intracellular tail that allows the recruitment and activation of the tyrosine kinase SYK, which is also essential for cross-presentation of dead-cell-associated antigens. Thus, CLEC9A functions as a SYK-coupled C-type lectin receptor to mediate sensing of necrosis by the principal dendritic-cell subset involved in regulating cross-priming to cell-associated antigens.
Quick Links:
 
Quick Links:
 

Expression

Publication --> Expression annotations

 

Other

24 Bio Entities

Trail: Publication

0 Expression