Publication | Open Access
DC-SIGN (CD209) Expression Is IL-4 Dependent and Is Negatively Regulated by IFN, TGF-β, and Anti-Inflammatory Agents
294
Citations
32
References
2002
Year
Il-4 DependentDendritic CellImmune RegulationImmunologyImmunologic MechanismCd4 T Cell ResponsesImmune SystemImmunotherapyImmune DysregulationInflammationMddc Differentiation MarkerAnti-inflammatory AgentsCell SignalingAllergyAutoimmune DiseaseChronic InflammationImmune SurveillanceAutoimmunityT Cell ImmunityImmune FunctionHivInflammatory DiseaseCell BiologyCytokineImmune Cell DevelopmentImmature MddcDendritic Cell BiologyCellular Immune ResponseMedicine
DC‑SIGN is a monocyte‑derived dendritic cell lectin that mediates DC migration, DC‑T cell interactions, and enhances HIV‑1 trans‑infection through gp120 binding. IL‑4 drives DC‑SIGN expression during monocyte‑to‑DC differentiation, a process amplified by GM‑CSF and suppressed by IFN‑α, IFN‑γ, TGF‑β, and dexamethasone, which also diminish DC‑SIGN‑dependent HIV‑1 binding, highlighting a regulatory axis that could be targeted therapeutically.
Dendritic cell-specific ICAM-3 grabbing nonintegrin (DC-SIGN) is a monocyte-derived dendritic cell (MDDC)-specific lectin which participates in dendritic cell (DC) migration and DC-T lymphocyte interactions at the initiation of immune responses and enhances trans-infection of T cells through its HIV gp120-binding ability. The generation of a DC-SIGN-specific mAb has allowed us to determine that the acquisition of DC-SIGN expression during the monocyte-DC differentiation pathway is primarily induced by IL-4, and that GM-CSF cooperates with IL-4 to generate a high level of DC-SIGN mRNA and cell surface expression on immature MDDC. IL-4 was capable of inducing DC-SIGN expression on monocytes without affecting the expression of other MDDC differentiation markers. By contrast, IFN-alpha, IFN-gamma, and TGF-beta were identified as negative regulators of DC-SIGN expression, as they prevented the IL-4-dependent induction of DC-SIGN mRNA on monocytes, and a similar inhibitory effect was exerted by dexamethasone, an inhibitor of the monocyte-MDDC differentiation pathway. The relevance of the inhibitory action of dexamethasone, IFN, and TGF-beta on DC-SIGN expression was emphasized by their ability to inhibit the DC-SIGN-dependent HIV-1 binding to differentiating MDDC. These results demonstrate that DC-SIGN, considered as a MDDC differentiation marker, is a molecule specifically expressed on IL-4-treated monocytes, and whose expression is subjected to a tight regulation by numerous cytokines and growth factors. This feature might help in the development of strategies to modulate the DC-SIGN-dependent cell surface attachment of HIV for therapeutic purposes.
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