Publication | Closed Access
Requirement for a Peptidoglycan Recognition Protein (PGRP) in Relish Activation and Antibacterial Immune Responses in <i>Drosophila</i>
592
Citations
25
References
2002
Year
Relish ActivationMicrobial PathogensInnate Immune SystemImmunologyMammalian Tlr4Bacterial LipopolysaccharideInnate ImmunityBacterial PathogensHost Immune ResponseHost ResponseToll-like ReceptorsMicrobial Cell WallsCell SignalingHost-pathogen InteractionsAntibacterial Immune ResponsesProtein FunctionImmune FunctionHost-microbe InteractionPeptidoglycan Recognition ProteinSignal TransductionPathogenesisMicrobiologyMedicine
Components of microbial cell walls are potent activators of innate immune responses in animals. For example, the mammalian TLR4 signaling pathway is activated by bacterial lipopolysaccharide and is required for resistance to infection by Gram-negative bacteria. Other components of microbial surfaces, such as peptidoglycan, are also potent activators of innate immune responses, but less is known about how those components activate host defense. Here we show that a peptidoglycan recognition protein, PGRP-LC, is absolutely required for the induction of antibacterial peptide genes in response to infection in Drosophila and acts by controlling activation of the NF-kappaB family transcription factor Relish.
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