| Literature DB >> 25784910 |
Fabrice Cognasse1, Kim Anh Nguyen2, Pauline Damien2, Archibald McNicol3, Bruno Pozzetto2, Hind Hamzeh-Cognasse2, Olivier Garraud4.
Abstract
Platelets are non-nucleated cells that play central roles in the processes of hemostasis, innate immunity, and inflammation; however, several reports show that these distinct functions are more closely linked than initially thought. Platelets express numerous receptors and contain hundreds of secretory products. These receptors and secretory products are instrumental to the platelet functional responses. The capacity of platelets to secrete copious amounts of cytokines, chemokines, and related molecules appears intimately related to the role of the platelet in inflammation. Platelets exhibit non-self-infectious danger detection molecules on their surfaces, including those belonging to the "toll-like receptor" family, as well as pathogen sensors of other natures (Ig- or complement receptors, etc.). These receptors permit platelets to both bind infectious agents and deliver differential signals leading to the secretion of cytokines/chemokines, under the control of specific intracellular regulatory pathways. In contrast, dysfunctional receptors or dysregulation of the intracellular pathway may increase the susceptibility to pathological inflammation. Physiological vs. pathological inflammation is tightly controlled by the sensors of danger expressed in resting, as well as in activated, platelets. These sensors, referred to as pathogen recognition receptors, primarily sense danger signals termed pathogen associated molecular patterns. As platelets are found in inflamed tissues and are involved in auto-immune disorders, it is possible that they can also be stimulated by internal pathogens. In such cases, platelets can also sense danger signals using damage associated molecular patterns (DAMPs). Some of the most significant DAMP family members are the alarmins, to which the Siglec family of molecules belongs. This review examines the role of platelets in anti-infection immunity via their TLRs and Siglec receptors.Entities:
Keywords: Siglec; TLR; cytokine/chemokine; inflammation; innate immunity; platelets
Year: 2015 PMID: 25784910 PMCID: PMC4345914 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2015.00083
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Platelet immune receptors. CLEC-2, C-type lectin-like type II transmembrane receptor; CR-2, complement receptor type 2; CCR-1, CCR-3, and CCR-4, C–C chemokine receptor type 1, 3, and 4, respectively; CXCR-4, C-X-C chemokine receptor type 4; DC-SIGN, dendritic cell-specific intercellular adhesion molecule-3-grabbing non-integrin; GP-VI, glycoprotein VI; CAR, coxsackie adenovirus receptor; s.a, Staphylococcus aureus; s.g, Streptococcus gordonii; s.s, Streptococcus sanguinis; s.e, Staphylococcus epidermidis. Adapted from Ref. (10, 19–23).
Platelet–bacteria interactions adapted from Ref. (.
| Platelet receptors | Bacteria/fungi | Bacterial proteins | Intermediary plasma molecules |
|---|---|---|---|
| GP-IIb–IIIa | SdrG | Fg | |
| FnbpA/B | Fibronectin | ||
| FnbpA/B | Fg | ||
| ClfA | Fibronectin | ||
| ClfA | Fg | ||
| IsdB | Direct | ||
| M1 | Fg | ||
| PadA | Direct | ||
| Fbl | Fg | ||
| GP-Iba | SrpA | Direct | |
| GspB/Hsa | Direct | ||
| Protein A | vWF | ||
| ? | vWF | ||
| FCγRIIa | FnbpA/B | IgG | |
| ClfA | IgG | ||
| TLR2 | ? | Direct | |
| Lipoprotein | Direct | ||
| TLR4 | LPS | Direct | |
| gC1q-R | ? | C1 | |
| TLR | Fungi | ? | Complement |
| Protease-activated receptors | Fungi | ? | Complement |
ClfA, clumping factor A; Fnbp, fibronectin-binding protein; Fg, Fibrinogen; GspB, glycosylated streptococcal protein B; Hsa, hemagglutinin salivary antigen; IsdB, iron-regulated surface determinant B; LPS, lipopolysaccharide; PadA, platelet adhesion binding protein A; SdrG, serine–aspartate repeat G; SrpA, serine-rich protein A; TLR, toll-like receptor; VWF, von Willebrand factor; ?, undefined.
Summary of known mammalian TLRs and Siglecs.
| Name | Expression | Ligands – Sialic acid linkage specificity | Name | Expression | Ligands | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Siglec-1 (CD169) | Mac | α2,3 > α2,6 | TLR1 | B, Mo, Mac, DCs, Plt | Multiple triacyl lipopeptides | ||
| Siglec-2 (CD22) | B | α2,6 | TLR2 | Mo, Mac, N, MyDCs, Mc, Plt | Multiple glycolipids | ||
| Multiple lipopeptides | |||||||
| Multiple lipoproteins | |||||||
| Lipoteichoic acid | |||||||
| HSP70 | |||||||
| Zymosan (beta-glucan) | |||||||
| Siglec-3 (CD33) | Mo, MyP | α2,6 > α2,3 | TLR3 | DC, B, Plt | Double-stranded RNA | ||
| Poly I:C | |||||||
| Siglec-4 (MAG) | OligoD, Schw | α2,3 > α2,6 | TLR4 | Mo, Mac, N, MyDCs, Mc, B, IE, Plt | Lipopolysaccharide heat shock proteins | ||
| Fg | |||||||
| Heparan sulfate fragments | |||||||
| Hyaluronic acid fragments | |||||||
| Nickel | |||||||
| Various opioid drugs | |||||||
| Siglec-5 (CD170) | N, Mo, B | α2,3 | TLR5 | Mo, Mac, DC, IE | Bacterial flagellin | ||
| Profilin | |||||||
| Siglec-6 (CD327) | Troph, B | α2,6 | TLR6 | Mo, Mac, B, Mc, Plt | Diacyl lipopeptides | ||
| Siglec-7 (CD328) | NK, Mo, Plt | α2,8 > α2,6 > α2,3 | TLR7 | Mo, Mac, pDC, B, Plt | Imidazoquinoline loxoribin (a guanosine analog) | ||
| Bropirimine | |||||||
| Single-stranded RNA | |||||||
| Siglec-8 | Eo, Ba | α2,3 > α2,6 | TLR8 | Mo, Mac, DC, Mc | Small synthetic compounds; single-stranded RNA | ||
| Siglec-9 (CD329) | Mo, N, DC, NK, Plt | α2,3 = α2,6 (prefers sulfated residues) | TLR9 | Mo, Mac, pDC, B, Plt | Unmethylated CpG oligodeoxynucleotide DNA | ||
| Siglec-10 | B, Mo, Eo | α2,3 = α2,6 | TLR10 | Unknown | Unknown | ||
| Siglec-11 | Mac, Plt | α2,8 | TLR11 | Mo, Mac, LC, KC, UBE | Profilin | ||
| Siglec-14 | ND | α2,6 | TLR12 | NE, pDC, DC, Mac | Profilin | ||
| Siglec-15 | ND | ND | TLR13 | Mo, Mac, DC | Bacterial ribosomal RNA sequence “CGGAAAGACC” |
Toll-like receptors and Siglecs bind different ligands and are expressed by different types of leukocytes or other cell types. Human B, B cells; Ba, basophils; cDCs, conventional dendritic cells; Eo, eosinophils; GRB2, growth-factor-receptor-bound protein 2; ITIM, immunoreceptor tyrosine-based inhibitory motif; Mac, macrophages; Mo, monocytes; MyP, myeloid progenitors; N, neutrophils; ND, not determined; NK, natural killer cells; OligoD, oligodendrocytes; pDCs, plasmacytoid dendritic cells; Schw, Schwann cells; Troph, trophoblasts; Plt, platelets, My DC, Myeloid dendritic cells; Mc, Mast cells; IE, Intestinal epithelium; liver cells, LC; kidney cells, KC; Urinary Bladder Epithelium, UBE; Neurons, NE. Adapted from Ref. (.
Figure 2The TLR signaling pathway and modulation effector molecules. Depending upon the TLR involved, the nuclear translocation of transcription factors occurs, including the “nuclear factor kappa B” (NFκB) in early and late stages (all TLRs), AP-1 (all except TLR 3), the “interferon regulation factor” (IRF)-3 (TLR3 and TLR4) and IRF-7 (TLR7/8/9). These pathways lead to inflammatory cytokine synthesis, or at least secretion in the case of platelets, as well as the production of interferon type 1 (IFN1).
Figure 3Platelets express several functional toll-like receptors (TLRs), such as TLR2, TLR3, TLR4, TLR7, and TLR9, which may potentially link innate immunity.
Modulation of TLR function by Siglecs adapted from Ref. (.
| Molecules | TLR ligands used | Cell type | Observed phenotype |
|---|---|---|---|
| CD22 | TLR3, 4, 7, and 9 | B | Enhanced proliferation of CD22 KO B cells |
| Siglec-G | TLR3, 4, 7, and 9 | B | Enhanced proliferation of Siglec-G KO B cells |
| HMGB1 | DC | Enhanced TNF-α production in Siglec-G KO DCs | |
| Siglec-E | TLR4 | Mac | Reduced IL-12 production by cross-linking with Abs |
| Siglec-H | TLR9 | pDC | Reduced IFN-α production by cross-linking with Abs |
| Siglec-5 | TLR2, 3, 4, and 9 | Mac | Reduced TNF-α and enhanced IL-10 production by over-expression |
| Siglec-9 | TLR2, 3, 4, and 9 | Mac | Reduced TNF-α and enhanced IL-10 production by over-expression |
| Siglec-11 | TLR4 | Mac | Reduced IL-1β transcript by cross-linking with Abs |
| Siglec-14 | TLR4 | Mac | Augmented TNF-α production by over-expression |
| CD33/Siglec-3 | TLR4/CD14 | imDCs | Reduced the phosphorylation of NF-κB |
| Siglec-9 | TLR2 | Mac | Siglecs exhibit lectin-dependent changes in cellular localization, which may be partly linked to its control mechanism that increases the production of IL-10 |
Figure 4Sialidase interrupts the Siglec-G inhibitory function that suppresses TLR signaling by DAMPs/PAMPs. (A) CD24 forms trimolecular complex with DAMPs/SAMPs and Siglec G that inhibits activation of TLR. (B) Pathogen-encoded sialidases cleave sialic acids on CD24 from interacting with Siglec G, leading to induce the inflammation/adaptive immunity/tissue damage. Adapted from Ref. (95, 142, 157).