4.6 Article

Control of intestinal Nod2-mediated peptidoglycan recognition by epithelium-associated lymphocytes

Journal

MUCOSAL IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 4, Issue 3, Pages 325-334

Publisher

SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1038/mi.2010.71

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Funding

  1. International Research Training Group [1273]
  2. German Research Foundation (DFG)
  3. Thyssen Foundation, the Collaborative Research Center [SFB 621, SFB 900]
  4. German Ministry of Education and Research [DLR 01GU0825, 01KI0752]
  5. NIH [AI057757, NIH AI30663]
  6. Howard Hughes Medical Institute

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Innate immune recognition of the bacterial cell wall constituent peptidoglycan by the cytosolic nucleotide-binding oligomerization domain 2 (Nod2) receptor has a pivotal role in the maintenance of intestinal mucosal homeostasis. Whereas peptidoglycan cleavage by gut-derived lysozyme preserves the recognition motif, the N-acetylmuramoyl-L-alanine amidase activity of the peptidoglycan recognition protein 2 (PGLYRP-2) destroys the Nod2-detected muramyl dipeptide structure. PGLYRP-2 green fluorescent protein (GFP) reporter and wild-type mice were studied by flow cytometry and quantitative RT-PCR to identify Pglyrp-2 expression in cells of the intestinal mucosa and reveal a potential regulatory function on epithelial peptidoglycan recognition. CD3(+)/CD11c(+) T lymphocytes revealed significant Pglyrp-2 expression, whereas epithelial cells and intestinal myeloid cells were negative. The mucosal Pglyrp-2-expressing lymphocyte population demonstrated a mixed T-cell receptor (TCR) alpha beta or gamma delta phenotype with predominant CD8 alpha and less so CD8 beta expression, as well as significant staining for the activation markers B220 and CD69, presenting a typical intraepithelial lymphocyte phenotype. Importantly, exposure of peptidoglycan to PGLYRP-2 significantly reduced Nod2/Rip2-mediated epithelial activation. Also, moderate but significant alterations of the intestinal microbiota composition were noted in Pglyrp-2-deficient animals. PGLYRP-2 might thus have a significant role in regulation of the enteric host-microbe homeostasis.

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