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INTERLEUKIN-4 REGULATES THE EXPRESSION OF CD209 AND SUBSEQUENT UPTAKE OF MYCOBACTERIUM LEPRAE BY SCHWANN CELLS IN HUMAN LEPROSY
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University of California Los Angeles. David Geffen School of Medicine. Department of Medicine. Division of Dermatology. Los Angeles, CA, USA.
University of California Los Angeles. David Geffen School of Medicine. Department of Medicine. Division of Dermatology. Los Angeles, CA, USA.
University of California Los Angeles. David Geffen School of Medicine. Department of Medicine. Division of Dermatology. Los Angeles, CA, USA.
University of Massachusetts Medical School. Division of Infectious Diseases and Immunology. Department of Medicine. Worcester, Massachussets, USA.
Fundação Oswaldo Cruz. Instituto Oswaldo Cruz. Laboratório de Hanseníase. Rio de Janeiro, RJ. Brasil.
University of California Los Angeles. David Geffen School of Medicine. Department of Medicine. Division of Dermatology. Los Angeles, CA, USA / University of California Los Angeles. Department of Microbiology, Immunology and Molecular Genetics. Los Angeles, CA, USA.
University of California Los Angeles. David Geffen School of Medicine. Department of Medicine. Division of Dermatology. Los Angeles, CA, USA.
University of California Los Angeles. David Geffen School of Medicine. Department of Medicine. Division of Dermatology. Los Angeles, CA, USA.
University of Massachusetts Medical School. Division of Infectious Diseases and Immunology. Department of Medicine. Worcester, Massachussets, USA.
Fundação Oswaldo Cruz. Instituto Oswaldo Cruz. Laboratório de Hanseníase. Rio de Janeiro, RJ. Brasil.
University of California Los Angeles. David Geffen School of Medicine. Department of Medicine. Division of Dermatology. Los Angeles, CA, USA / University of California Los Angeles. Department of Microbiology, Immunology and Molecular Genetics. Los Angeles, CA, USA.
Abstract
The ability of microbial pathogens to target specific cell types is a key aspect of the pathogenesis of infectious disease. Mycobacterium leprae, by infecting Schwann cells, contributes to nerve injury in patients with leprosy. Here, we investigated mechanisms of host-pathogen interaction in the peripheral nerve lesions of leprosy. We found that the expression of the C-type lectin, CD209, known to be expressed on tissue macrophages and to mediate the uptake of M. leprae, was present on Schwann cells, colocalizing with the Schwann cell marker, CNPase (2',3'-cyclic nucleotide 3'-phosphodiesterase), along with the M. leprae antigen PGL-1 in the peripheral nerve biopsy specimens. In vitro, human CD209-positive Schwann cells, both from primary cultures and a long-term line, have a higher binding of M. leprae compared to CD209-negative Schwann cells. Interleukin-4, known to be expressed in skin lesions from multibacillary patients, increased CD209 expression on human Schwann cells and subsequent Schwann cell binding to M. leprae, whereas Th1 cytokines did not induce CD209 expression on these cells. Therefore, the regulated expression of CD209 represents a common mechanism by which Schwann cells and macrophages bind and take up M. leprae, contributing to the pathogenesis of leprosy.
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