CD14 Is a Cell-activating Receptor for Bacterial Peptidoglycan
The hypothesis that CD14 (an endotoxin receptor present on macrophages and neutrophils) acts as a cell-activating receptor for bacterial peptidoglycan was tested using mouse 70Z/3 cells transfected with human CD14. 70Z/3 cells transfected with an empty vector were unresponsive to insoluble and solub...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of biological chemistry 1996-09, Vol.271 (38), p.23310-23316 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The hypothesis that CD14 (an endotoxin receptor present on macrophages and neutrophils) acts as a cell-activating receptor
for bacterial peptidoglycan was tested using mouse 70Z/3 cells transfected with human CD14. 70Z/3 cells transfected with an
empty vector were unresponsive to insoluble and soluble peptidoglycan, as well as to low concentrations of endotoxin. 70Z/3-CD14
cells were responsive to both insoluble and soluble peptidoglycan, as well as to low concentrations of endotoxin, as measured
by the expression of surface IgM, activation of NF-κB, and degradation of IκB-α. Peptidoglycan also induced activation of
NF-κB and degradation of IκB-α in macrophage RAW264.7 cells. These peptidoglycan-induced effects (in contrast to endotoxin-induced
effects) were not inhibited by polymyxin B. Both peptidoglycan- and endotoxin-induced activation of NF-κB were inhibited by
anti-CD14 mAb. The N-terminal 151 amino acids of CD14 were sufficient for acquisition of full responsiveness to both peptidoglycan
and endotoxin, but CD14 deletion mutants lacking four small regions within the N-terminal 65 amino acids showed differentially
diminished responses to peptidoglycan and endotoxin. These results identify CD14 as the functional receptor for peptidoglycan
and demonstrate that similar, but not identical sequences in the N-terminal 65-amino acid region of CD14 are critical for
the NF-κB and IgM responses to both peptidoglycan and endotoxin. |
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ISSN: | 0021-9258 1083-351X |
DOI: | 10.1074/jbc.271.38.23310 |