Category Ranking

98%

Total Visits

921

Avg Visit Duration

2 minutes

Citations

20

Article Abstract

Epidermal Langerhans cells (eLCs) uniquely express the C-type lectin receptor langerin in addition to the HIV entry receptors CD4 and CCR5. They are among the first target cells to encounter HIV in the anogenital stratified squamous mucosa during sexual transmission. Previous reports on the mechanism of HIV transfer to T cells and the role of langerin have been contradictory. In this study, we examined HIV replication and langerin-mediated viral transfer by authentic immature eLCs and model Mutz-3 LCs. eLCs were productively infected with HIV, whereas Mutz-3 LCs were not susceptible because of a lack of CCR5 expression. Two successive phases of HIV viral transfer to T cells via cave/vesicular trafficking and de novo replication were observed with eLCs as previously described in monocyte-derived or blood dendritic cells, but only first phase transfer was observed with Mutz-3 LCs. Langerin was expressed as trimers after cross-linking on the cell surface of Mutz-3 LCs and in this form preferentially bound HIV envelope protein gp140 and whole HIV particles via the carbohydrate recognition domain (CRD). Both phases of HIV transfer from eLCs to T cells were inhibited when eLCs were pretreated with a mAb to langerin CRD or when HIV was pretreated with a soluble langerin trimeric extracellular domain or by a CRD homolog. However, the langerin homolog did not inhibit direct HIV infection of T cells. These two novel soluble langerin inhibitors could be developed to prevent HIV uptake, infection, and subsequent transfer to T cells during early stages of infection.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.1400630DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

mutz-3 lcs
16
hiv
12
transfer cells
12
cells
10
langerhans cells
8
cells role
8
langerin
8
role langerin
8
hiv transfer
8
viral transfer
8

Similar Publications

Air pollution is an exogenous stressor known to have a detrimental impact on skin health through the induction of inflammation; however, the direct effect of topical pollution exposure is still being elucidated. Human skin equivalents (HSE) aim to reproduce in vitro the structure and function of the native skin tissue. However, HSEs typically lack skin-resident immune cells, which could play a key role in the inflammatory response induced by pollution exposure.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Research on dendritic cell (DC) activation has mostly relied on animal models, highlighting the need for human-based in vitro models due to differences in DC types across species.
  • Scientists have created a full-thickness human skin tissue model with Langerhans cell (LC) and dermal dendritic cell (DDC) surrogates from human leukemia cell lines to study their activation.
  • When exposed to nickel sulfate or DNCB, the model showed significant increases in CD1a positive cells, indicating that these treatments trigger a response leading to DC migration and activation within a short time frame.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The MUTZ-3 cell line is a surrogate for Langerhans cells (LCs) employed in New Approach Methodologies for assessing the skin sensitizing potential of chemicals. However, MUTZ-3 cells must first be differentiated to achieve the LC-typical phenotype. As all protocols use high fetal calf serum (FCS) concentrations, we aimed at reducing, or even replacing FCS, while maintaining MUTZ-LC characteristics.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Titanium salts tested in reconstructed human skin with integrated MUTZ-3-derived Langerhans cells show an irritant rather than a sensitizing potential.

Contact Dermatitis

November 2020

Department of Molecular Cell Biology and Immunology, Amsterdam University Medical Centre, Amsterdam Infection and Immunity Institute, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

Background: The nature of clinically related adverse reactions to titanium is still unknown.

Objective: To determine whether titanium salts have irritant or sensitizing potential in a reconstructed human skin (RHS) model with integrated Langerhans cells (LCs).

Methods: RHS-LCs (ie, reconstructed epidermis) containing primary differentiated keratinocytes and CFSE CD1a -LCs generated from the MUTZ-3 cell line on a primary fibroblast-populated collagen hydrogel (dermis) were topically exposed to titanium(IV) bis(ammonium lactato)dihydroxide (TiALH).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Human cell-based approaches to assess defined key events in allergic contact dermatitis (ACD) are well-established, but lack cutaneous penetration and biotransformation as well as cellular cross-talk. Herein, we integrated in vitro-generated immature MUTZ-3-derived Langerhans-like cells (MUTZ-LCs) or monocyte-derived LC-like cells (MoLCs) into reconstructed human skin (RHS), consistent of a stratified epidermis formed by primary keratinocytes on a dermal compartment with collagen-embedded primary fibroblasts. LC-like cells were mainly localized in the epidermal compartment and distributed homogenously in accordance with native human skin.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF