Regulation of Toll-like receptors in human monocytes and dendritic cells

A Visintin, A Mazzoni, JH Spitzer, DH Wyllie… - The Journal of …, 2001 - journals.aai.org
A Visintin, A Mazzoni, JH Spitzer, DH Wyllie, SK Dower, DM Segal
The Journal of Immunology, 2001journals.aai.org
A number of pathogens induce immature dendritic cells (iDC) to migrate to lymphoid organs
where, as mature DC (mDC), they serve as efficient APC. We hypothesized that pathogen
recognition by iDC is mediated by Toll-like receptors (TLRs), and asked which TLRs are
expressed during the progression of monocytes to mDC. We first measured mRNA levels for
TLRs 1–5 and MD2 (a protein required for TLR4 function) by Northern analysis. For most
TLRs, message expression decreased severalfold as monocytes differentiated into iDC, but …
Abstract
A number of pathogens induce immature dendritic cells (iDC) to migrate to lymphoid organs where, as mature DC (mDC), they serve as efficient APC. We hypothesized that pathogen recognition by iDC is mediated by Toll-like receptors (TLRs), and asked which TLRs are expressed during the progression of monocytes to mDC. We first measured mRNA levels for TLRs 1–5 and MD2 (a protein required for TLR4 function) by Northern analysis. For most TLRs, message expression decreased severalfold as monocytes differentiated into iDC, but opposing this trend, TLR3 and MD2 showed marked increases during iDC formation. When iDC were induced to mature with LPS or TNF-α, expression of most TLRs transiently increased and then nearly disappeared. Stimulation of iDC, but not mDC, with LPS resulted in the activation of IL-1 receptor-associated kinase, an early component in the TLR signaling pathway, strongly suggesting that LPS signals through a TLR. Surface expression of TLRs 1 and 4, as measured by mAb binding, was very low, corresponding to a few thousand molecules per cell in monocytes, and a few hundred or less in iDC. We conclude that TLRs are expressed in iDC and are involved in responses to at least one pathogen-derived substance, LPS. If TLR4 is solely responsible for LPS signaling in humans, as it is in mice, then its extremely low surface expression implies that it is a very efficient signal transducer in iDC.
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