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Publication : Redistribution of the glycocalyx exposes phagocytic determinants on apoptotic cells.

First Author  Le T Year  2024
Journal  Dev Cell Volume  59
Issue  7 Pages  853-868.e7
PubMed ID  38359833 Mgi Jnum  J:347636
Mgi Id  MGI:7621076 Doi  10.1016/j.devcel.2024.01.020
Citation  Le T, et al. (2024) Redistribution of the glycocalyx exposes phagocytic determinants on apoptotic cells. Dev Cell 59(7):853-868.e7
abstractText  Phagocytes remove dead and dying cells by engaging "eat-me" ligands such as phosphatidylserine (PtdSer) on the surface of apoptotic targets. However, PtdSer is obscured by the bulky exofacial glycocalyx, which also exposes ligands that activate "don't-eat-me" receptors such as Siglecs. Clearly, unshielding the juxtamembrane "eat-me" ligands is required for the successful engulfment of apoptotic cells, but the mechanisms underlying this process have not been described. Using human and murine cells, we find that apoptosis-induced retraction and weakening of the cytoskeleton that anchors transmembrane proteins cause an inhomogeneous redistribution of the glycocalyx: actin-depleted blebs emerge, lacking the glycocalyx, while the rest of the apoptotic cell body retains sufficient actin to tether the glycocalyx in place. Thus, apoptotic blebs can be engaged by phagocytes and are targeted for engulfment. Therefore, in cells with an elaborate glycocalyx, such as mucinous cancer cells, this "don't-come-close-to-me" barrier must be removed to enable clearance by phagocytosis.
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