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Distribution and lateral mobility of DC-SIGN on immature dendritic cells--implications for pathogen uptake.
J Cell Sci. 2008 Mar 01; 121(Pt 5):634-43.JC

Abstract

The receptor C-type lectin DC-SIGN (CD209) is expressed by immature dendritic cells, functioning as an antigen capture receptor and cell adhesion molecule. Various microbes, including HIV-1, can exploit binding to DC-SIGN to gain entry to dendritic cells. DC-SIGN forms discrete nanoscale clusters on immature dendritic cells that are thought to be important for viral binding. We confirmed that these DC-SIGN clusters also exist both in live dendritic cells and in cell lines that ectopically express DC-SIGN. Moreover, DC-SIGN has an unusual polarized lateral distribution in the plasma membrane of dendritic cells and other cells: the receptor is preferentially localized to the leading edge of the dendritic cell lamellipod and largely excluded from the ventral plasma membrane. Colocalization of DC-SIGN clusters with endocytic activity demonstrated that surface DC-SIGN clusters are enriched near the leading edge, whereas endocytosis of these clusters occurred preferentially at lamellar sites posterior to the leading edge. Therefore, we predicted that DC-SIGN clusters move from the leading edge to zones of internalization. Two modes of lateral mobility were evident from the trajectories of DC-SIGN clusters at the leading edge, directed and non-directed mobility. Clusters with directed mobility moved in a highly linear fashion from the leading edge to rearward locations in the lamella at remarkably high velocity (1420+/-260 nm/second). Based on these data, we propose that DC-SIGN clusters move from the leading edge--where the dendritic cell is likely to encounter pathogens in tissue--to a medial lamellar site where clusters enter the cell via endocytosis. Immature dendritic cells may acquire and internalize HIV and other pathogens by this process.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Department of Cell and Developmental Biology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC 27599, USA.No affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Language

eng

PubMed ID

18270264

Citation

Neumann, Aaron K., et al. "Distribution and Lateral Mobility of DC-SIGN On Immature Dendritic Cells--implications for Pathogen Uptake." Journal of Cell Science, vol. 121, no. Pt 5, 2008, pp. 634-43.
Neumann AK, Thompson NL, Jacobson K. Distribution and lateral mobility of DC-SIGN on immature dendritic cells--implications for pathogen uptake. J Cell Sci. 2008;121(Pt 5):634-43.
Neumann, A. K., Thompson, N. L., & Jacobson, K. (2008). Distribution and lateral mobility of DC-SIGN on immature dendritic cells--implications for pathogen uptake. Journal of Cell Science, 121(Pt 5), 634-43. https://doi.org/10.1242/jcs.022418
Neumann AK, Thompson NL, Jacobson K. Distribution and Lateral Mobility of DC-SIGN On Immature Dendritic Cells--implications for Pathogen Uptake. J Cell Sci. 2008 Mar 1;121(Pt 5):634-43. PubMed PMID: 18270264.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Distribution and lateral mobility of DC-SIGN on immature dendritic cells--implications for pathogen uptake. AU - Neumann,Aaron K, AU - Thompson,Nancy L, AU - Jacobson,Ken, Y1 - 2008/02/12/ PY - 2008/2/14/pubmed PY - 2008/7/10/medline PY - 2008/2/14/entrez SP - 634 EP - 43 JF - Journal of cell science JO - J Cell Sci VL - 121 IS - Pt 5 N2 - The receptor C-type lectin DC-SIGN (CD209) is expressed by immature dendritic cells, functioning as an antigen capture receptor and cell adhesion molecule. Various microbes, including HIV-1, can exploit binding to DC-SIGN to gain entry to dendritic cells. DC-SIGN forms discrete nanoscale clusters on immature dendritic cells that are thought to be important for viral binding. We confirmed that these DC-SIGN clusters also exist both in live dendritic cells and in cell lines that ectopically express DC-SIGN. Moreover, DC-SIGN has an unusual polarized lateral distribution in the plasma membrane of dendritic cells and other cells: the receptor is preferentially localized to the leading edge of the dendritic cell lamellipod and largely excluded from the ventral plasma membrane. Colocalization of DC-SIGN clusters with endocytic activity demonstrated that surface DC-SIGN clusters are enriched near the leading edge, whereas endocytosis of these clusters occurred preferentially at lamellar sites posterior to the leading edge. Therefore, we predicted that DC-SIGN clusters move from the leading edge to zones of internalization. Two modes of lateral mobility were evident from the trajectories of DC-SIGN clusters at the leading edge, directed and non-directed mobility. Clusters with directed mobility moved in a highly linear fashion from the leading edge to rearward locations in the lamella at remarkably high velocity (1420+/-260 nm/second). Based on these data, we propose that DC-SIGN clusters move from the leading edge--where the dendritic cell is likely to encounter pathogens in tissue--to a medial lamellar site where clusters enter the cell via endocytosis. Immature dendritic cells may acquire and internalize HIV and other pathogens by this process. SN - 0021-9533 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/18270264/Distribution_and_lateral_mobility_of_DC_SIGN_on_immature_dendritic_cells__implications_for_pathogen_uptake_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -