Crespo Hélio J, Lau Joseph T Y, Videira Paula A
CEDOC - UC Imunologia, Faculdade de Ciências Médicas, Universidade Nova de Lisboa , Lisbon , Portugal ; Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology, Roswell Park Cancer Institute , Buffalo, NY , USA.
Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology, Roswell Park Cancer Institute , Buffalo, NY , USA.
Front Immunol. 2013 Dec 27;4:491. doi: 10.3389/fimmu.2013.00491.
Glycans decorating cell surface and secreted proteins and lipids occupy the juncture where critical host-host and host-pathogen interactions occur. The role of glycan epitopes in cell-cell and cell-pathogen adhesive events is already well-established, and cell surface glycan structures change rapidly in response to stimulus and inflammatory cues. Despite the wide acceptance that glycans are centrally implicated in immunity, exactly how glycans and their changes contribute to the overall immune response remains poorly defined. Sialic acids are unique sugars that usually occupy the terminal position of the glycan chains and may be modified by external factors, such as pathogens, or upon specific physiological cellular events. At cell surface, sialic acid-modified structures form the key fundamental determinants for a number of receptors with known involvement in cellular adhesiveness and cell trafficking, such as the Selectins and the Siglec families of carbohydrate recognizing receptors. Dendritic cells (DCs) preside over the transition from innate to the adaptive immune repertoires, and no other cell has such relevant role in antigen screening, uptake, and its presentation to lymphocytes, ultimately triggering the adaptive immune response. Interestingly, sialic acid-modified structures are involved in all DC functions, such as antigen uptake, DC migration, and capacity to prime T cell responses. Sialic acid content changes along DC differentiation and activation and, while, not yet fully understood, these changes have important implications in DC functions. This review focuses on the developmental regulation of DC surface sialic acids and how manipulation of DC surface sialic acids can affect immune-critical DC functions by altering antigen endocytosis, pathogen and tumor cell recognition, cell recruitment, and capacity for T cell priming. The existing evidence points to a potential of DC surface sialylation as a therapeutic target to improve and diversify DC-based therapies.
修饰细胞表面、分泌蛋白和脂质的聚糖处于关键的宿主-宿主和宿主-病原体相互作用发生的节点。聚糖表位在细胞-细胞和细胞-病原体黏附事件中的作用已经得到充分证实,并且细胞表面聚糖结构会根据刺激和炎症信号迅速变化。尽管人们普遍认为聚糖在免疫中起着核心作用,但聚糖及其变化究竟如何促成整体免疫反应仍不清楚。唾液酸是独特的糖类,通常占据聚糖链的末端位置,可能会受到外部因素(如病原体)或特定生理细胞事件的影响而发生修饰。在细胞表面,唾液酸修饰的结构构成了许多已知参与细胞黏附和细胞运输的受体的关键基本决定因素,例如选择素和唾液酸结合免疫球蛋白样凝集素家族的碳水化合物识别受体。树突状细胞(DC)主导着从先天免疫到适应性免疫反应的转变,没有其他细胞在抗原筛选、摄取及其呈递给淋巴细胞方面发挥如此重要的作用,最终触发适应性免疫反应。有趣的是,唾液酸修饰的结构参与了DC的所有功能,如抗原摄取、DC迁移以及启动T细胞反应的能力。唾液酸含量随着DC的分化和激活而变化,虽然尚未完全了解,但这些变化对DC功能具有重要意义。本综述重点关注DC表面唾液酸的发育调控,以及操纵DC表面唾液酸如何通过改变抗原内吞作用、病原体和肿瘤细胞识别、细胞募集以及T细胞启动能力来影响免疫关键的DC功能。现有证据表明,DC表面唾液酸化具有作为治疗靶点的潜力,可改善和多样化基于DC的治疗方法。