| Literature DB >> 25525300 |
Javier Oviedo-Boyso1, Alejandro Bravo-Patiño1, Víctor M Baizabal-Aguirre1.
Abstract
Early sensing of pathogenic bacteria by the host immune system is important to develop effective mechanisms to kill the invader. Microbial recognition, activation of signaling pathways, and effector mechanisms are sequential events that must be highly controlled to successfully eliminate the pathogen. Host recognizes pathogens through pattern-recognition receptors (PRRs) that sense pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMPs). Some of these PRRs include Toll-like receptors (TLRs), nucleotide-binding oligomerization domain-like receptors (NLRs), retinoic acid-inducible gene-I- (RIG-I-) like receptors (RLRs), and C-type lectin receptors (CLRs). TLRs and NLRs are PRRs that play a key role in recognition of extracellular and intracellular bacteria and control the inflammatory response. The activation of TLRs and NLRs by their respective ligands activates downstream signaling pathways that converge on activation of transcription factors, such as nuclear factor-kappaB (NF-κB), activator protein-1 (AP-1) or interferon regulatory factors (IRFs), leading to expression of inflammatory cytokines and antimicrobial molecules. The goal of this review is to discuss how the TLRs and NRLs signaling pathways collaborate in a cooperative or synergistic manner to counteract the infectious agents. A deep knowledge of the biochemical events initiated by each of these receptors will undoubtedly have a high impact in the design of more effective strategies to control inflammation.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25525300 PMCID: PMC4267164 DOI: 10.1155/2014/432785
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mediators Inflamm ISSN: 0962-9351 Impact factor: 4.711
Expression and localization of TLRs and NLRs in cellular types.
| Receptor | Cellular type | Localization | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| TLR1 | Monocytes, mature macrophages, mast cell, and dendritic cells | Cell surface | [ |
| TLR2 | Monocytes, mature macrophages, and mast cell | Cell surface | [ |
| TLR3 | Dendritic cells | Endosomes | [ |
| TLR4 | Predominately in monocytes, mature macrophages, dendritic cells, mast cells, and intestinal epithelial cells | Cell surface | [ |
| TLR5 | Predominately in intestinal epithelial cells, monocytes, macrophages, and dendritic cells | Cell surface | [ |
| TLR6 | Monocytes, mature macrophages, and mast cell | Cell surface | [ |
| TLR7 | Monocytes, macrophages, and plasmacytoid dendritic cells | Endosomes | [ |
| TLR8 | Monocytes, macrophages, and mast cells | Endosomes | [ |
| TLR9 | Monocytes, macrophages, and plasmacytoid dendritic cells | Endosomes | [ |
| TLR10 | Macrophages, trophoblasts, and intestinal epithelial cells in response to | Cell surface, but can colocalize with TLR2 in phagosome | [ |
| TLR11 | Macrophages, dendritic cells, and human embryonic kidney cells | Cell surface and endoplasmic reticulum | [ |
| TLR12 | Macrophages and dendritic cells | Colocalizes with TLR11 in endoplasmic reticulum | [ |
| NOD1 | Macrophages, human mononuclear cells, intestinal epithelial cells, and dendritic cells | Intracellularly | [ |
| NOD2 | Macrophages, neutrophils, dendritic cells, Paneth cells, human airway smooth muscle cells, and epithelial and endothelial cells | Intracellularly | [ |
| NLRC4 | Macrophages and gut epithelial cells | Intracellularly | [ |
| NLRP1 | Lymphocytes, respiratory epithelial cells, and myeloid cells | Intracellularly | [ |
| NLRP3 | Myeloid cells and human bronchial epithelial cells | Intracellularly | [ |
Figure 1TLRs signaling. TLR signaling is activated in a MyD88-dependent (black arrows) and TRIF-dependent (blue arrows) manner. MyD88 signaling leads to NF-κB activation, while TRIF signaling leads to both IRF3 and NF-κB activation. In the MyD88-dependent ubiquitination of TRAF6 is important to activate MAPKs (JNK, p38 and ERK) or IKK complex to induce the translocation of NF-κB to the nucleus. The TRIF-dependent signaling pathway can activate NF-κB, IRF3, and IRF7.
Figure 2NOD1 and NOD2 signaling. Bacteria or their components reach the cytosol by several mechanisms. The interaction between NOD2 and NIK (blue arrows) activates the noncanonical NF-κB pathway (p100/p52-dependent). While binding of PGN to LRR domain of NLRs leads to recruitment of RIP-2 through CARD-CARD interaction (black arrows). Ubiquitination of RIP-2 favors, on the one hand, the activation of the MAPKs p38/JNK, and on the other hand activates IKK complex, which induces the activation of NF-κB.
Analysis of the collaborative action of TLRs and NRLs using synthetic agonists.
| Cell type | Chemical agonist used | Receptors involved | Cellular response |
|---|---|---|---|
| Human monocytic leukemia THP-1 | iE-DAP and MDP | NOD1 and NOD2 | NF- |
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| Human oral epithelial HSC-2 | FK156 and MDP | NOD1 and NOD2 | NF- |
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| Human embryonic kidney HEK293T and human monocytes | MtriDAP and MDP or MtriLYS | NOD1 and NOD2 | Release of TNF- |
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| Bone marrow-derived mice macrophages | MDP | NOD2 | Activation of NF- |
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| Human dendritic cells | FK565 and MDP | NOD1 and NOD2 | Production of IL-12p70, IL-15, and IFN- |
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| Human blood mononuclear cells | MtriDAP | NOD1 | Secretion of TNF- |
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| Human homozygotic macrophages (3020 | MDP | NOD2 | Production of TNF- |
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| Murine and human CD8 T cells | iE-DAP | NOD1 | Activation of NF- |
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| Monocyte derived-dendritic cells | iE-DAP and MDP | NOD1 and NOD2 | Secretion of IL-1 |
Analysis of the collaborative action of TLRs and NRLs in response to pathogenic bacteria.
| Organism/Cell type | Pathogen bacteria | Receptors involved | Cellular response evaluated |
|---|---|---|---|
| Human homozygotic macrophages (3020 |
| NOD2 and TLR2 | Production of TNF- |
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| Human homozygotic macrophages (3020 |
| NOD2, TLR2 and TLR4 | Production of TNF- |
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| Bone marrow-derived macrophages from TLR2−/−, NOD2−/− or WT mice |
| NOD2 and TLR2 | Production of IL-10 |
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| Mesothelial cells from RICK−/−, NOD1−/− or WT mice |
| NOD1 and TLR2 | Production of CXCL1 and CCL2 |
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| NOD1−/−, NOD2−/−, RIP2−/− or WT mice |
| NOD1, NOD2, TLR2 and TLR4 | Expression of iNOS, production of NO, IL-6, IL12p40 and IFN- |
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| NLRC4−/−/TLR5−/− or WT mice |
| NLRC4 and TLR5 | Bacterial clearance, recruitment of neutrophils |
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| MyD88−/−, RIP2−/−, WT mice or with nonfunctional |
| NLRC4, TLR2, TLR5 and TLR9 | Replication and dissemination of bacteria, rates of mortality and production of IL-6 |
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| NOD1−/−, NOD2−/−, NLRP3−/−, NLRC4−/−, Casp1−/−, Asc−/−, TLR2−/− or WT mice |
| NOD2, TLR2 and NLRP3 | Production of IL-1 |
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| BALB/c mice and human monocyitic leukemia THP-1 |
| NOD1 and TLR5 | Bacterial clearance and production of IL-5, IL-6, IL-13, IL-21, IL-22, TNF- |
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| Dendritic cell |
| NOD2 and TLR2 | Production of IL-6 and IL-1 |
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| Mice double deficient in |
| TLRs and NLRP3 | Activation of NF- |
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| Mice and primary monocytes |
| TLR5 and NLRC4 | Autophagy and production of IL-17, IL-18 and Type I IFN |