Publication | Closed Access
Phenyl Glycolipids with Different Glycosyl Groups Exhibit Marked Differences in Murine and Human iNKT Cell Activation
17
Citations
37
References
2016
Year
Antibody Isotope SwitchGlycobiologyImmune RegulationImmunodominanceImmunologyImmunologic MechanismImmunotherapeuticsImmune SystemCellular PhysiologySynthetic ImmunologyTumor ImmunityImmunochemistryPhenyl GslsCell SignalingGlycosylationCell ActivationBiochemistryPhenyl GlycolipidsImmunoengineeringCellular BiologyAutoimmunityT Cell ImmunityHumoral ImmunityImmune FunctionPharmacologyCell BiologyPhenyl DerivativeMolecular ImmunologySignal TransductionCellular BiochemistryMedicine
Glycosphingolipids (GSLs) bearing the α-galactosyl headgroup and the acyl chain terminated with a phenyl derivative were found to be more potent than α-galactosyl ceramide (αGalCer) to stimulate both murine and human invariant natural killer T (iNKT) cells and to induce an antibody isotope switch to IgG. In this study, we replaced the galactosyl group with glucose (αGlc) and its fluoro-analogs and found that phenyl GSLs with αGlc (C34-Glc) and its fluoro-analog 6F-C34-Glc were stronger than those with αGal in stimulating human iNKT cells but weaker in mice. Their activities have a strong correlation with the binding avidities of the ternary interaction between the iNKT-cell receptor (iNKTCR) and CD1d-GSL complex. It was the iNKTCR rather than CD1d that dictated the species-specific responses. C34-Glc was further used as an adjuvant for a SSEA4-crm-197 vaccine, and after immunization in mice, the vaccine was highly effective against Lewis lung carcinoma.
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