1. Academic Validation
  2. Cutting edge: carbohydrate profiling identifies new pathogens that interact with dendritic cell-specific ICAM-3-grabbing nonintegrin on dendritic cells

Cutting edge: carbohydrate profiling identifies new pathogens that interact with dendritic cell-specific ICAM-3-grabbing nonintegrin on dendritic cells

  • J Immunol. 2003 Feb 15;170(4):1635-9. doi: 10.4049/jimmunol.170.4.1635.
Ben J Appelmelk 1 Irma van Die Sandra J van Vliet Christina M J E Vandenbroucke-Grauls Teunis B H Geijtenbeek Yvette van Kooyk
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Medical Microbiology, Vrije Universiteit Medical Center, Van der Boechorstraat 7, 1081 BT Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Abstract

Dendritic cells (DC) are instrumental in handling pathogens for processing and presentation to T cells, thus eliciting an appropriate immune response. C-type lectins expressed by DC function as pathogen-recognition receptors; yet their specificity for carbohydrate structures on pathogens is not fully understood. In this study, we analyzed the carbohydrate specificity of DC-specific ICAM-3-grabbing nonintegrin (SIGN)/CD209, the recently documented HIV-1 receptor on DC. Our studies show that DC-SIGN binds with high affinity to both synthetic mannose- and fucose-containing glycoconjugates. These carbohydrate structures are abundantly expressed by pathogens as demonstrated by the affinity of DC-SIGN for natural surface glycans of the human pathogens Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Helicobacter pylori, Leishmania mexicana, and Schistosoma mansoni. This analysis expands our knowledge on the carbohydrate and pathogen-specificity of DC-SIGN and identifies this lectin to be central in pathogen-DC interactions.

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