Eckmann Lars
Department of Medicine, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, California 92093, USA.
Curr Opin Gastroenterol. 2005 Mar;21(2):147-51. doi: 10.1097/01.mog.0000153311.97832.8c.
Antimicrobial proteins are key effector molecules of innate immunity. The review discusses recent progress in understanding the function of these host defence molecules in intestinal physiology.
All antimicrobial proteins can inhibit or kill bacteria in vitro, but differ markedly in their localization, regulation, and additional activities. alpha-Defensins are expressed constitutively in human neutrophils and small intestinal Paneth cells, where they require proteolytic processing and signal-induced release to be active in the intestinal lumen. Neutrophil-derived alpha-defensins can inhibit angiogenesis. Cryptdin-related sequence peptides form a subfamily of alpha-defensins in murine but not human Paneth cells that can form covalently linked heterodimers, leading to increased structural diversity and antimicrobial target range. Human beta-defensins (hBD) are expressed prominently in epithelial cells of the intestinal tract and other organs exposed to the environment. Their epithelial production is either constitutive, as exemplified by hBD-1, or strongly inducible, as shown for hBD-2,-3, and -4. Human cathelicidin, LL-37/hCAP18, is expressed constitutively by differentiated epithelial cells in the colon and stomach, but not the small intestine, as well as neutrophils and mast cells. It has multiple functions beyond its antimicrobial activity, including promotion of angiogenesis, attraction of leukocyte subsets, and activation of chemokine secretion. Angiogenins are a family of host defence-related ribonucleases, of which at least one is secreted by murine Paneth cells.
The differential expression of diverse antimicrobial proteins in the gastrointestinal tract suggests that they occupy distinct functional niches in mucosal innate defence, which holds promise for pharmacological exploitation of their antimicrobial properties.
抗菌蛋白是固有免疫的关键效应分子。本文综述了在理解这些宿主防御分子在肠道生理学中的功能方面的最新进展。
所有抗菌蛋白在体外均可抑制或杀死细菌,但它们在定位、调节及其他活性方面存在显著差异。α-防御素在人类中性粒细胞和小肠潘氏细胞中组成性表达,在肠道腔内发挥活性需要蛋白水解加工和信号诱导释放。中性粒细胞衍生的α-防御素可抑制血管生成。隐窝防御素相关序列肽在小鼠而非人类潘氏细胞中形成α-防御素亚家族,可形成共价连接的异二聚体,导致结构多样性增加和抗菌靶点范围扩大。人类β-防御素(hBD)在肠道及其他暴露于外界环境的器官的上皮细胞中显著表达。其上皮细胞表达有的是组成性的,如hBD-1;有的是强烈诱导性的,如hBD-2、-3和-4。人类cathelicidin,LL-37/hCAP18,由结肠和胃中分化的上皮细胞组成性表达,但小肠中不表达,中性粒细胞和肥大细胞也可表达。它除了具有抗菌活性外还有多种功能,包括促进血管生成、吸引白细胞亚群以及激活趋化因子分泌。血管生成素是一类与宿主防御相关的核糖核酸酶家族,其中至少有一种由小鼠潘氏细胞分泌。
多种抗菌蛋白在胃肠道中的差异表达表明它们在黏膜固有防御中占据不同的功能龛位,这为药理学开发其抗菌特性带来了希望。