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Rapid evolution of binding specificities and expression patterns of inhibitory CD33-related Siglecs in primates.

Authors :
Padler-Karavani, Vered
Hurtado-Ziola, Nan
Yung-Chi Chang
Sonnenburg, Justin L.
Ronaghy, Arash
Hai Yu
Verhagen, Andrea
Nizet, Victor
Xi Chen
Varki, Nissi
Varki, Ajit
Takashi Angata
Source :
FASEB Journal; Mar2014, Vol. 28 Issue 3, p1280-1293, 14p
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Siglecs are sialic acid-binding Ig-like lectins that recognize sialoglycans via amino-terminal V-set domains. CD33-related Siglecs (CD33r Siglecs) on innate immune cells recognize endogenous sialoglycans as "self-associated molecular patterns" (SAMPs), dampening immune responses via cytosolic immunoreceptor tyrosine-based inhibition motifs that recruit tyrosine phosphatases. However, sialic acid-expressing pathogens subvert this mechanism through molecular mimicry. Meanwhile, endogenous host SAMPs must continually evolve to evade other pathogens that exploit sialic acids as invasion targets. We hypothesized that these opposing selection forces have accelerated CD33r Siglec evolution. We address this by comparative analysis of major CD33r Siglec (Siglec-3, Siglec-5, and Siglec-9) orthologs in humans, chimpanzees, and baboons. Recombinant soluble molecules displaying ligand-binding domains show marked quantitative and qualitative interspecies differences in interactions with strains of the sialylated pathogen, group B Streptococcus, and with sialoglycans presented as gangliosides or in the form of sialoglycan microarrays, including variations such as N-glycolyl and O-acetyl groups. Primate Siglecs also show quantitative and qualitative intra- and interspecies variations in expression patterns on leukocytes, both in circulation and in tissues. Taken together our data explain why the CD33r Siglec-encoding gene cluster is undergoing rapid evolution v/a multiple mechanisms, driven by the need to maintain self-recognition by innate immune cells, while escaping 2 distinct mechanisms of pathogen subversion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
08926638
Volume :
28
Issue :
3
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
FASEB Journal
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
94948337
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1096/fj.13-241497