1. Activated mesangial cells acquire the function of antigen presentation.
- Author
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Zhao, Yinghua, Li, Qinggang, Ouyang, Qing, Wu, Lingling, and Chen, Xiangmei
- Subjects
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ANTIGEN presentation , *CELL physiology , *T cells , *IMMUNE response , *KIDNEY development , *MAST cell disease , *KIDNEY glomerulus diseases - Abstract
• In this paper, by reviewing MC phagocytic function, activated MC expression of APC surface markers, and MC participation in the inflammatory response and local renal immune response, we confirm that activated MCs can act as APCs in renal disease. • This review introduces MC function through a developmental perspective and summarizes the important role of MC as antigen-presenting cells in renal local immune response. • This review mentions the uniqueness of MC and also points out the limitations of MC research at this stage. Mesangial cells (MCs), as resident cells of the kidneys, play an important role in maintaining glomerular function. MCs are located between the capillary loops of the glomeruli and mainly support the capillary plexus, constrict blood vessels, extracellular matrix components, produce cytokines, and perform phagocytosis and clearance of macromolecular substances. When the glomerular environment changes, MCs are often affected, which can lead to functional transformation. The immune response is involved in the occurrence and development of various kidney diseases, in these diseases, antigen-presenting cells (APCs) play an important role. APCs can present antigens to T lymphocytes, causing them to become activated and proliferate. Studies have shown that MCs have phagocytic function and express APC markers on the cell surface. Additionally, MCs are stimulated by or produce various inflammatory factors to participate in the renal inflammatory response. Therefore, MCs have potential antigen presentation function and participate in the pathological changes of various kidney diseases as APCs upon activation. In this paper, by reviewing MC phagocytic function, activated MC expression of APC surface markers, and MC participation in the inflammatory response and local renal immune response, we confirm that activated MCs can act as APCs in renal disease. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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