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  4. Gram-negative bacteria-binding protein, a pattern recognition receptor for lipopolysaccharide and beta-1,3-glucan that mediates the signaling for the induction of innate immune genes in Drosophila melanogaster cells
 
research article

Gram-negative bacteria-binding protein, a pattern recognition receptor for lipopolysaccharide and beta-1,3-glucan that mediates the signaling for the induction of innate immune genes in Drosophila melanogaster cells

Kim, Y. S.
•
Ryu, J. H.
•
Han, S. J.
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2000
Journal of Biological Chemistry

Pattern recognition receptors, non-clonal immune proteins recognizing common microbial components, are critical for non-self recognition and the subsequent induction of Rel/NF-kappaB-controlled innate immune genes. However, the molecular identities of such receptors are still obscure. Here, we present data showing that Drosophila possesses at least three cDNAs encoding members of the Gram-negative bacteria-binding protein (DGNBP) family, one of which, DGNBP-1, has been characterized. Western blot, flow cytometric, and confocal laser microscopic analyses demonstrate that DGNBP-1 exists in both a soluble and a glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored membrane form in culture medium supernatant and on Drosophila immunocompetent cells, respectively. DGNBP-1 has a high affinity to microbial immune elicitors such as lipopolysaccharide (LPS) and beta-1,3-glucan whereas no binding affinity is detected with peptidoglycan, beta-1,4-glucan, or chitin. Importantly, the overexpression of DGNBP-1 in Drosophila immunocompetent cells enhances LPS- and beta-1,3-glucan-induced innate immune gene (NF-kappaB-dependent antimicrobial peptide gene) expression, which can be specifically blocked by pretreatment with anti-DGNBP-1 antibody. These results suggest that DGNBP-1 functions as a pattern recognition receptor for LPS from Gram-negative bacteria and beta-1, 3-glucan from fungi and plays an important role in non-self recognition and the subsequent immune signal transmission for the induction of antimicrobial peptide genes in the Drosophila innate immune system.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1074/jbc.M003934200
PubMed ID

10827089

Author(s)
Kim, Y. S.
Ryu, J. H.
Han, S. J.
Choi, K. H.
Nam, K. B.
Jang, I. H.
Lemaitre, B.  
Brey, P. T.
Lee, W. J.
Date Issued

2000

Publisher

American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology

Published in
Journal of Biological Chemistry
Volume

275

Issue

42

Start page

32721

End page

7

Subjects

Gene Expression Regulation

•

Developmental

•

Insect Proteins

•

beta-Glucans

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

OTHER

EPFL units
UPLEM  
Available on Infoscience
September 17, 2010
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/53771
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