| Literature DB >> 26733763 |
Jing Lu1, Mita Chatterjee1, Hannes Schmid1, Sandra Beck1, Meinrad Gawaz1.
Abstract
CXCL14, a relatively novel chemokine, is a non-ELR (glutamic acid-leucine-arginine) chemokine with a broad spectrum of biological activities. CXCL14 mainly contributes to the regulation of immune cell migration, also executes antimicrobial immunity. The identity of the receptor for CXCL14 still remains obscure and therefore the intracellular signaling pathway is not entirely delineated. The present review summarizes the contribution of CXCL14 in these two aspects and discusses the biological mechanisms regulating CXCL14 expression and potential CXCL14 mediated functional implications in a variety of cells.Entities:
Keywords: Antimicrobial activity; CXCL14; Infection; Inflammation; Migration
Year: 2016 PMID: 26733763 PMCID: PMC4700668 DOI: 10.1186/s12950-015-0109-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Inflamm (Lond) ISSN: 1476-9255 Impact factor: 4.981
Fig. 1Structural similarities of CXCL11, CXCL12 and CXCL14. a CXCL11, CXCL12 and CXCL14 are all small chemokines with a similar molecular structure. The three chemokines all share a C-terminal α-helix and comprise high pI values. Structures of the molecules were obtained by RCSB protein data bank and pdb-files were displayed with Jmol: an open-source Java viewer for chemical structures in 3D. http://www.jmol.org/. b CXCL11, CXCL12 and CXCL14 share high amino acid sequence conservation with 4 cysteines, 2 lysines and 1 proline residue being conserved throughout all 3 chemokines (conserved amino acids shown by asterisk *). Alignment was performed using Clustal Omega multiple sequence alignment tool. (References: [12, 65–67])
Fig. 2Schematic diagram showing the cellular sources of CXCL14, cells that have been demonstrated to express or release CXCL14 constitutively of following inflammatory cues; the target cells on which CXCL14 exerts its chemotactic activity, modulates differentiation or executes microbicidal actions thereby contributing to immune surveillance and immune defence
Cellular sources, target cells and potential functional significance of CXCL14 to immune functions
| Cells or tissues expressing CXCL14 as mRNA or protein | Target cells for CXCL14 | Functional effects of CXCL14 | Sources of recombinant CXCL14 protein | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| mRNA detected in human heart, brain, placenta, lung, liver, skeletal muscle, kidney, and pancreas; colon adenocarcinoma cell SW 485, and melanoma cell MDA-MB-435 | No | Synthesized human CXCL14 | 1999 Hromas et al. [ | |
| mRNA detected in mouse brain, ovary, lung, and muscle; Human intestine, colon, kidney, liver, spleen, thymus, placenta, brain, pancreas, skeletal muscle, heart, cervix, uterus, and breast | B cells, macrophages, CESS (human B cell line), A20 (murine B cell line), THP-1 (human monocyte leukemia cell) | Chemoattraction of CESS and THP-1 cells; Inflammation induction | Synthesized murine CXCL14 | 2000 Sleeman et al. [ |
| mRNA detected in human kidney, intestine, brain, placenta, skeletal muscle, liver, spleen, thymus, and pancreas; very faint expression in testis, ovary, heart, and lung. | Human neutrophils and monocyte-derived DC | A strong chemoattractant for human neutrophils, and weaker for human DC | Human CXCL14 in supernatant from transfected 293 cells | 2000 Cao et al. [ |
| Epithelium of tubules of mouse kidney; hepatocytes in mouse liver; monocyte-derived dendritic cell (DC); THP-1 | ||||
| mRNA in human skin, kidney, intestine, spleen, colon, muscle, liver, brain, placenta, thymus, breast, exocervix, ovary and heart; squamous epithelium; oral epithelial cells, epidermal keratinocytes; LPS activated B cells and monocytes; inflammatory and stromal cells adjacent to carcinomas | Potential role in host-tumor interactions | 2000 Frederick et al. [ | ||
| mRNA in human epithelial layer of intestine, kidney, stomach, colon, appendix, trachea; Skin keratinocytes, dermal fibroblasts, lamina propria cells in intestine; HaCaT (human keratinocyte cell line) | Freshly isolated monocytes (weak), monocytes treated with prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) or forskolin (strong) | Monocyte chemoattractant; potential role in macrophage development; CXCL14 signals through Bordetella pertussis toxin-sensitive receptor in PGE2-treated monocytes | Synthesized human CXCL14 | 2001 Kurth et al. [ |
| CXCL14 protein expression in human: Suprabasal layers of tongue mucosa, stromal cells adjacent to tumors | human endothelial cells, monocyte-derived immature dendritic cells (iDCs) | Potent inhibitor of chemotaxis for human endothelial cells and | Recombinant human CXCL14 | 2004 Shellenberger et al. [ |
| CXCL14 protein in human: Oral squamous epithelium | Human monocyte-derived iDCs | Stimulation of iDCs migration and maturation, and NF-κB activation | Recombinant human CXCL14 | 2005 Shurin et al. [ |
| Protein expression in human: blood vessels in dermal plexus and epidermal keratinocytes of skin | CD14+ DC precursors derived from CD34+ hematopoietic progenitor cells (HPCs) and blood CD14+monocytes | Stimulation of CD14+ monocyte migration, possible contribution to the differentiation of CD14+ DC precursors into Langerhans cell-like cells in epidermal tissue under steady-state condition | Recombinant human CXCL14 and CXCL14 purified from supernatant of primary keratinocyte culture | 2005 Schaerli et al. [ |
| Activated human natural killer(NK) cells; an IL-2-dependent natural killer leukemia cell line; monocyte-derived iDCs | Stimulation of activated human NK cells and iDCs; no effect on proliferation or cytotoxic activity of normal human NK cells | CXCL14 synthetic peptide, CXCL14 expressed in bacterial vector and HPLC-purified; recombinant eukaryotic CXCL14 | 2006 Starnes et al. [ | |
| DCs stimulated with activin A | Human and murine iDCs | Mediator for activin A-induced migration of iDCs | Recombinant human CXCL14 | 2009 Salogni et al. [ |
| Protein in human: glandular epithelial cells in endometrium in the secretory phase of menstrual cycle | Human uterine natural killer (uNK) cells | Stimulation of uNK cell migration during the secretory phase of the cycle | Recombinant human CXCL14 | 2010 Mokhtar et al. [ |
| Human THP-1 cells and iDCs | The chemotactic effect on THP-1 and iDCs | Recombinant human CXCL14 | 2010 Tanegashima et al. [ | |
| PGE2-treated THP-1, | Induction of THP-1 migration; antimicrobial activity to facilitate bacterial clearance in mouse lung | Recombinant human CXCL14 | 2015 Dai et al. [ |