| Literature DB >> 29730580 |
Abstract
The immune system is a very diverse system of the host that evolved during evolution to cope with various pathogens present in the vicinity of environmental surroundings inhabited by multicellular organisms ranging from achordates to chordates (including humans). For example, cells of immune system express various pattern recognition receptors (PRRs) that detect danger via recognizing specific pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMPs) and mount a specific immune response. Toll-like receptors (TLRs) are one of these PRRs expressed by various immune cells. However, they were first discovered in the Drosophila melanogaster (common fruit fly) as genes/proteins important in embryonic development and dorso-ventral body patterning/polarity. Till date, 13 different types of TLRs (TLR1-TLR13) have been discovered and described in mammals since the first discovery of TLR4 in humans in late 1997. This discovery of TLR4 in humans revolutionized the field of innate immunity and thus the immunology and host-pathogen interaction. Since then TLRs are found to be expressed on various immune cells and have been targeted for therapeutic drug development for various infectious and inflammatory diseases including cancer. Even, Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) among various TLR genes have been identified among the different human population and their association with susceptibility/resistance to certain infections and other inflammatory diseases. Thus, in the present review the current and future importance of TLRs in immunity, their pattern of expression among various immune cells along with TLR based therapeutic approach is reviewed.Entities:
Keywords: Infection; Inflammation; Innate immunity; PAMPs; PRRs; TLRs
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29730580 PMCID: PMC7106078 DOI: 10.1016/j.intimp.2018.03.002
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int Immunopharmacol ISSN: 1567-5769 Impact factor: 4.932
TLRs, their cellular location, major ligands with their source, TLR SNPs and disease association.
| TLRs | TLR polymorphism (SNP and nucleic acid variant) | TLR polymorphism and disease association | TLR localization | Ligands | Origin of ligands |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| TLR1 | T1805G (I602S) R80T | 602S SNP in TLR1 is protective against Leprosy caused by | Plasma membrane | Triacyl lipopeptide | Bacteria and mycobacteria |
| TLR2 | T597C R753Q, SNP-15607A/G of haplotype 2 of TLR2 | T597C SNP Protects against leprosy but predisposes towards tuberculosis infection [ | Plasma membrane | PGN, LTA, Lipoproteins or lipopeptides, lipoarabinomannan, A phenol-soluble modulin, Glycoinositolphosp-holipids, glycolipids, porins, zymosan, atypical LPS, Hsp70, EDN | Gram +ve bacteria, mycobacteria, |
| TLR3 | rs1879026 (G/T), rs13126816, rs3775291, L412F TLR3 polymorphism, 299698T/G, 293248A/A, 299698T/T | rs1879026 (G/T) is linked to increased prevalence of hepatitis B virus infection [ | Endolysosome | dsRNA | Viruses |
| TLR4 | A896G or D299G C1196T or T399I are non-synonymous SNPs and are linkage disequilibrium [ | D299G TLR4 polymorphism is associated with increased incidence of gram negative bacteraemia and sepsis [ | Plasma membrane | LPS, Taxol, Fusion protein, Envelope proteins, HMG-B1, Hsp60, Hsp70, Hsp22, Hsp96, Type III repeat extra domain A of fibronectin, oligosaccharides of hyaluronic acids, polysaccharide fragments of heparin sulphate, fibrinogen, saturated fatty-acids and Fetuin-A | Gram negative bacteria, Plant, RSV, MMTV, |
| TLR5 | C1174T (R392) (replacement of sequence encoding Arg392 with a stop codon) | People with this SNP are more prone to develop | Plasma membrane | Flagellin | Bacteria |
| TLR6 | A1401G (a TLR6 promoter SNP) C744T | Associated with high risk of prostate cancer in patients homo or heterozygous for A1401G [ | Plasma membrane | Di-acyl lipopeptides, Zymosan | Mycoplasma |
| TLR7 | Intron I, c.IT-120G | c.1-120G TLR7 allele protects male patients to develop inflammation and fibrosis during chronic HCV-infection [ | Endolysosome | ssRNA, loxoribine, bropirimine | Viruses, synthetic compounds |
| TLR8 | 129G | Male patients infected with chronic HCV infection exhibit less inflammation due to less IFN-α production [ | Endolysosome | ssRNA | Viruses |
| TLR9 | G-1174A and A1635G | People with these two SNPs in TLR9 exhibit rapid progressor phenotype for HIV-1 infection [ | Endolysosome | CpG oligodeoxyneucleotide (ODN), Hemozoin pigment | Bacteria and viruses (HSV), Malaria |
| TLR10 | ND | ND | Endolysosome | ND | ND |
| TLR11 | NA | NA | Endolysosome | Profilin-like protein | |
| TLR12 | NA | NA | Endolysosome | Profilin-like protein | |
| TLR13 | NA | NA | Endolysosome | 23s ribosomal RNA | Bacteria |