Abstract

The innate immune system is the first shield against foreign attack inside the human body, and it is usually carried out with phagocytosis. An essential macrophage cell surface protein is the Fc receptor which contributes to the engulfment of unknown antigens. One of the important members of Fc receptors is the gamma receptor that binds to the immunoglobulin G (IgG) ligand. Another key receptor in this study is the CD36 receptor, which plays a crucial role in the progression of atherosclerosis, the hardening of arteries, with its ligand oxidized low-density lipoprotein (OxLDL). In this report, protein tyrosine kinase enzymes have been detected in the involvement of receptor complexes with human U937 macrophages, specifically PTK2 and PTK2b genes. Protein tyrosine kinases were known to promote cell migration as a main player in intracellular signal transduction cascades in relation to extracellular stimuli. Cell surface proteins are essential for the immunization of various diseases; yet, the molecular machinery of surface receptors remains unclear. This research primarily examined the dynamic nature of protein tyrosine kinases in an ongoing investigation of macrophage cell surface receptors, particularly the role of Fc γ and CD36 receptors with their ligands IgG and oxLDL coated beads in phagocytosis. Our report demonstrates a novel role of PTK2 and PTK2b functions in relation to U937 CD36-mediated phagocytosis. The Phagocytic efficiency of U937 macrophages was analyzed using laser scanning confocal microscope after silencing the cells with siRNA followed by quantitative counting of phagocytosis. The PF drug FAK inhibitor was also introduced to compare the phagocytic efficiency of siRNA cells.

Highlights

  • The live-cell affinity receptor chromatography (LARC) protocol was used to identify the proteins interacting with the fragment crystal (Fc) and CD36 receptor complexes in U937 macrophages

  • The controls for LARC-immunoglobulin G (IgG) and LARCoxLDL were accomplished by incubating each of the IgG and oxidized LDL (oxLDL) beads with crude homogenates from U937 cells and, in most of the cases, the controls show lower protein tyrosine kinases (PTKs) peptide scores indicating a unique detection of PTKs and eliminating false positive results (Table 1)

  • The LARC-IgG-Media-beads and LARCoxLDL-Media-beads columns represent PTKs peptide scores derived from the media used to incubate IgG or oxLDL beads with U937 cells

Read more

Summary

Introduction

In atherosclerosis (accumulation of lipids in the arterial intima) few studies have associated protein tyrosine kinases (PTKs) with cardiovascular disease. Tyrosine kinases are enzymes that are related to the protein kinase family and play an important role in various cellular functions (cell adhesion, signaling, etc). Recent review studies that have provided structural information about FAK and Pyk offer important insights into the function and molecular pathways of regulation; the key structural question as to how lipids bind to FAK domains (FERM domain) and the mechanism(s) involved remain unresolved (Hall and Schaller, 2011). The known associations between protein kinases and Fc (fragment crystallizable) gamma receptor (receptor for immunoglobulin G) (Jankowski et al, 2008) and/or CD36 (receptor for lipid particles) receptor involves phagocytosis processes in immune cells such as macrophages (unpublished data). The machinery of FAK and Pyk activation remains unclear

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call