| Literature DB >> 22069594 |
Susana Cubillos1, Johannes Norgauer, Katja Lehmann.
Abstract
Leukocytes are a heterogeneous group of cells that display differences in anatomic localization, cell surface phenotype, and function. The different subtypes include e.g., granulocytes, monocytes, dendritic cells, T cells, B cells and NK cells. These different cell types represent the cellular component of innate and adaptive immunity. Using certain toxins such as pertussis toxin, cholera toxin or clostridium difficile toxin, the regulatory functions of Gα(i), Gαs and small GTPases of the Rho family in leukocytes have been reported. A summary of these reports is discussed in this review.Entities:
Keywords: leukocytes; signal transduction; toxins
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2010 PMID: 22069594 PMCID: PMC3153219 DOI: 10.3390/toxins2040428
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Toxins (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6651 Impact factor: 4.546
Figure 1Differentiation diagram of CD34 bone marrow stem cells and progenitors into the different leukocytes subtypes.
The main specific functions of the leukocyte subtypes.
| Cell Type | Main functions |
|---|---|
| Monocytes | Monocytes ingest antibodies or complement opsonized material by |
| Neutrophils | Neutrophils can express cell-adhesion molecules that allow |
| B Cells | B cells produce |
| αβ T Cells | T cells play a central role in cell-mediated immunity. There are several subgroups: |
| T cells that express the CD4 protein on their surface are called | |
| T cells that express the CD8 protein on their surface are called | |
| γδ T Cells | This small group of T cells possesses a distinct T cell receptor (TCR) on their surface. It seems that these cells are able to recognize whole proteins rather than requiring peptides to be presented by MHC molecules on APCs. |
| γδ T cells utilize a variety of different mechanisms to regulate the inflammatory response. They secret | |
| NK Cells | NK cells play a major role in the rejection of tumors and cells infected by viruses. The cells kill by |
| Dendritic Cells | Upon activation, dendritic cells |
Effect of pertussis toxin on different leukocyte functions. + is an increase or induction, - is an inhibition or decrease of different cell functions.
| Cell Type | Cell functions | Pertussis toxin |
|---|---|---|
| Monocytes | Phagocytosis | |
| Cytokine production | ||
| Chemotaxis | ||
| Migration | ||
| Neutrophils | Cytotoxicity | |
| Phagocytosis | ||
| Oxygen reactive species | ||
| Degranulation | ||
| Migration | ||
| Chemotaxis | ||
| B Cells | Proliferation | |
| Activation | ||
| Antibody production | ||
| Migration | ||
| αβ T Cells | Proliferation | |
| Cytokine production | ||
| Migration | ||
| Chemotaxis | ||
| Th1 selection | ||
| Th2 differentiation | ||
| γδ T Cells | Proliferation | |
| NK Cells | Cytotoxicity | |
| Chemotaxis | ||
| Dendritic Cells | Antigen presentation | |
| Cytokine production | ||
| Migration | ||
| Chemotaxis |
Effect of cholera toxin on different leukocyte functions. + is an increase or induction, - is an inhibition or decrease, ne means no effect, and the other are simply several Cholera toxin effects on different cell functions.
| Cell Type | Cell functions | Cholera toxin |
|---|---|---|
| Monocytes | Phagocytosis | |
| Cytokine production | ||
| Oxygen reactive species | ne[ | |
| Chemotaxis | ne [ | |
| Migration | ne[ | |
| Neutrophils | Phagocytosis | |
| Oxygen reactive species | ||
| Degranulation | ne [ | |
| Migration | ||
| Chemotaxis | ||
| B Cells | Proliferation | |
| Immunoglobulin production | ||
| Memory cells | ||
| αβ T Cells | Proliferation | |
| Activation | ||
| Cytotoxicity | ||
| Cytokine production | ||
| Chemotaxis | ||
| Th1 selection | ||
| Th2 differentiation | ||
| Tolerance or memory | ||
| NK Cells | Proliferation | |
| Activation | ||
| Cytotoxicity | ||
| Migration | ||
| Chemotaxis | ||
| Dendritic Cells | Activation | |
| Antigen presentation | ||
| Cytokine production | ||
| Migration |
Figure 2The glucosylation blocks (a) the activation of the GTPases by their activators (GEFs) and (b) inhibits intrinsic and GAP-stimulated GTPase activity. (c) The glucolsylated Rho GTPase is not able to interact with GDI and is therefore located at the plasma membrane. (d) The consequence of the glucosylation is the inhibition of the interaction with the effector proteins (kinases or adapter proteins) with subsequent blocking of signal transduction pathways.
Effect of Clostridium difficile Toxin A and Toxin B (TcdA and TcdB) on different leukocyte functions. + is an increase or induction, - is an inhibition or decrease, ne means no effect, and the other are several TcdA and TcdB reported effects on different cell functions.
| Cell Type | Cell functions | Clostridium difficile toxins A and B |
|---|---|---|
| Monocytes | Phagocytosis | ne [ |
| Cytokine production | ||
| Migration | ||
| Neutrophils | Phagocytosis | |
| Oxygen reactive species | ||
| Migration | ||
| Chemotaxis | ||
| αβ T Cells | Proliferation | |
| NK Cells | Cytotoxicity | |
| Dendritic Cells | Maturation | |
| Phagocytosis | ||
| Migration |