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Repression of phagocytosis by human CD33 is not conserved with mouse CD33

Authors :
Bhattacherjee, A.
Rodrigues, E.
Jung, J.
Luzentales-Simpson, M.
Enterina, J.
Galleguillos, D.
Laurent, S.
D., C.
Nakhaei-Nejad, M.
Fuchsberger, F.
Streith, L.
Wang, Q.
Kawasaki, N.
Duan, S.
Bains, A.
Paulson, J.
Rademacher, C.
Giuliani, F.
Sipione, S.
Macauley, M.
Source :
Communications Biology, Communications Biology, Vol 2, Iss 1, Pp 1-13 (2019)
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

CD33 is an immunomodulatory receptor linked to Alzheimer’s disease (AD) susceptibility via regulation of phagocytosis in microglia. Divergent features between human CD33 (hCD33) and murine CD33 (mCD33) include a unique transmembrane lysine in mCD33 and cytoplasmic tyrosine in hCD33. The functional consequences of these differences in restraining phagocytosis remains poorly understood. Using a new αmCD33 monoclonal antibody, we show that mCD33 is expressed at high levels on neutrophils and low levels on microglia. Notably, cell surface expression of mCD33 is entirely dependent on Dap12 due to an interaction with the transmembrane lysine in mCD33. In RAW264.7 cultured macrophages, BV-2 cultured microglia, primary neonatal and adult microglia, uptake of cargo — including aggregated Aβ1–42 — is not altered upon genetic ablation of mCD33. Alternatively, deletion of hCD33 in monocytic cell lines increased cargo uptake. Moreover, transgenic mice expressing hCD33 in the microglial cell lineage showed repressed cargo uptake in primary microglia. Therefore, mCD33 and hCD33 have divergent roles in regulating phagocytosis, highlighting the importance of studying hCD33 in AD susceptibility.<br />Abhishek Bhattacherjee et al. investigate the functional differences between human and mouse CD33, an immunomodulatory receptor linked to Alzheimer’s disease. They find that loss of mouse CD33 does not affect cargo uptake in macrophages in contrast to human CD33, which represses phagocytosis when expressed in cells or mice.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Communications Biology, Communications Biology, Vol 2, Iss 1, Pp 1-13 (2019)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....46fcb763947baf01e8140fe54e3efff2