| Literature DB >> 31507616 |
Xinming Wang1,2, Abishek Iyer3, A Bruce Lyons4, Heinrich Körner1,5, Wei Wei1.
Abstract
Macrophages have emerged as a key component of the innate immune system that emigrates to peripheral tissues during gestation and in the adult organism. Their complex pathway to maturity, their unique plasticity and their various roles as effector and regulatory cells during an immune response have been the focus of intense research. A class of surface molecules, the G-Protein coupled receptors (GPCRs) play important roles in many immune processes. They have drawn attention in regard to these functions and the potential for therapeutic targets that can modulate the response of immune cells in pathologies such as diabetes, atherosclerosis, and chronic inflammatory diseases. Of the more than 800 GPCRs identified, ~100 are currently targeted with drugs which have had their activity investigated in vivo. Macrophages express a number of GPCRs which have central roles during cell differentiation and in the regulation of their functions. While some macrophage GPCRs such as chemokine receptors have been studied in great detail, the roles of other receptors of this large family are still not well understood. This review summarizes new insights into macrophage biology, differences of human, and mouse macrophages and gives details of some of the GPCRs expressed by this cell type.Entities:
Keywords: G-protein coupled receptors; differentiation; innate immunity; macrophages; polarization
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31507616 PMCID: PMC6718513 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2019.02031
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
GPCRs expressed on macrophages.
| Sphingosine-1-phosphate receptor | S1PR1 (EDG1), S1PR2 (EDG5) and S1PR4 (EDG6) | Class A | Macrophage activation (promotes M2) and immune regulation, migration | ( |
| Leucine-rich repeat-containing G-protein coupled receptor | LGR1-4 | Class A | Macrophage activation (promotes M2) and immune regulation | ( |
| Chemokine receptors | CR, CCR, CXCR, CX2CR, CX3CR | Class A | Cell migration during macrophage development and inflammation, activation | ( |
| Purinergic receptors | P2Y purinoceptor family; Adenosine or P1 receptor family (ARA1-ARA3) | Class A | Pro- and anti-inflammatory macrophage activation | ( |
| Complement protein 3a receptor | C3aR | Class A | Innate immunity, metabolic regulation, immune regulation | ( |
| Complement protein 5a receptor | C5aR | Class A | Macrophage activation (M1) and immune regulation, migration. | ( |
| Protease-activated receptors | PAR1, PAR2, PAR3, PAR4 | Class A | Macrophage activation (M1) and immune regulation | ( |
Other macrophage-expressed GPCR.
| Histamine H4 receptor | HRH4 | Class A | Potentially macrophage activation (M2) and immune regulation | ( |
| 5-Hydroxytryptamine receptor 2B or serotonin receptor 2B | HTR2B | Class A | Potentially macrophage polarization (M2) | ( |
| EGF-like module-containing mucin-like hormone receptor-like (EGF-TM7 family) | EMR3 | Class B | Potentially macrophage activation and immune regulation | ( |
| Angiotensin receptors | AT1 – AT4 | Class A | Pro- and anti-flammatory macrophage activation | ( |
| Succinate receptor 1 | SUCNR1 | Class A | M2 polarization, metabolic response of obesity | ( |
| Mas-related GPCR | MRGPCRF | Class A | Potentially inflammation | ( |
| Endothelin receptor | ETA, B1, B2, C | Class A | Potentially macrophage polarization and inflammation | ( |
| Lysophosphatidic acid receptor | LPA5 or GPR92 | Class A | Potentially macrophage activation and inflammation | ( |
| G protein-coupled receptor family C type 5A | GPCR5A | Class C | Inflammation | ( |