Dectin-1 intracellular domain determines species-specific ligand spectrum by modulating receptor sensitivity

作者:Takano Tomotsugu; Motozono Chihiro*; Imai Takashi; Sonoda Koh Hei; Nakanishi Yoichi; Yamasaki Sho*
来源:JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY, 2017, 292(41): 16933-16941.
DOI:10.1074/jbc.M117.800847

摘要

C-type lectin receptors (CLRs) comprise a large family of immunoreceptors that recognize polysaccharide ligands exposed on pathogen surfaces and are conserved among mammals. However, interspecies differences in their ligand spectrums are not fully understood. Dectin-1 is a well-characterized CLR that recognizes -glucan. We report here that seaweed-derived fucan activates cells expressing human Dectin-1 but not mouse Dectin-1. Low-valency -glucan components within fucan appeared to be responsible for this activation, as the ligand activity was eliminated by -glucanase treatment. The low-valency -glucan laminarin also acted as an agonist for human Dectin-1 but not for mouse Dectin-1, whereas the high-valency -glucan curdlan activated both human and mouse Dectin-1. Reciprocal mutagenesis analysis revealed that the ligand-binding domain of human Dectin-1 does not determine its unique sensitivity to low-valency -glucan. Rather, we found that its intracellular domain renders human Dectin-1 reactive to low-valency -glucan ligand. Substitution with two amino acids, Glu(2) and Pro(5), located in the human Dectin-1 intracellular domain was sufficient to confer sensitivity to low-valency -glucan in mouse Dectin-1. Conversely, the introduction of mouse-specific amino acids, Lys(2) and Ser(5), to human Dectin-1 reduced the reactivity to low-valency -glucan. Indeed, low-valency ligands induced a set of proinflammatory genes in human but not mouse dendritic cells. These results suggest that the intracellular domain, not ligand-binding domain, of Dectin-1 determines the species-specific ligand profile.

  • 出版日期2017-10-13