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Microbial stimulation fully differentiates monocytes to DC-SIGN/CD209(+) dendritic cells for immune T cell areas
Authors:Cheong Cheolho  Matos Ines  Choi Jae-Hoon  Dandamudi Durga Bhavani  Shrestha Elina  Longhi M Paula  Jeffrey Kate L  Anthony Robert M  Kluger Courtney  Nchinda Godwin  Koh Hyein  Rodriguez Anthony  Idoyaga Juliana  Pack Maggi  Velinzon Klara  Park Chae Gyu  Steinman Ralph M
Institution:Chris Browne Center for Immunology and Immune Diseases, The Rockefeller University, New York, NY 10065, USA. ccheong@rockefeller.edu
Abstract:Dendritic cells (DCs), critical antigen-presenting cells for immune control, normally derive from bone marrow precursors distinct from monocytes. It is not yet established if the large reservoir of monocytes can develop into cells with critical features of DCs in vivo. We now show that fully differentiated monocyte-derived DCs (Mo-DCs) develop in mice and DC-SIGN/CD209a marks the cells. Mo-DCs are recruited from blood monocytes into lymph nodes by lipopolysaccharide and live or dead gram-negative bacteria. Mobilization requires TLR4 and its CD14 coreceptor and Trif. When tested for antigen-presenting function, Mo-DCs are as active as classical DCs, including cross-presentation of proteins and live gram-negative bacteria on MHC I in vivo. Fully differentiated Mo-DCs acquire DC morphology and localize to T cell areas via L-selectin and CCR7. Thus the blood monocyte reservoir becomes the dominant presenting cell in response to select microbes, yielding DC-SIGN(+) cells with critical functions of DCs.
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