Abstract

The C-type lectin receptor has been shown to recognize carbohydrate moieties of self and non-self antigens, thus serving as an innate immune receptor. Using bioinformatics and molecular cloning techniques, we isolated a bovine gene that encodes a polypeptide of 206 amino acids with structural features shared by mouse and human dectin-2, including a high homology with mouse dectin-2 (66%), a type II configuration, a short cytoplasmic domain without tyrosine-based signal motifs, a carbohydrate recognition domain, a putative N-glycosylation site, and an EPN motif involved in the Ca 2+-dependent binding of hexose carbohydrates. These results reveal this bovine gene to be a counterpart of mouse dectin-2. Moreover, the bovine dectin-2 gene showed heterogeneity in mRNA (the generation of alternatively spliced transcript) and segmentation into six exons, which are also observed in mouse dectin-2. Inconsistent with mouse dectin-2 mRNA, the bovine counterpart is abundantly expressed by Langerhans cells compared to macrophages; however, lymph nodes showed the highest expression level of bovine dectin-2, while spleen and lung showed the highest expression levels of mouse and human dectin-2. In cattle, dectin-2 expressed by dendritic cells may be clinically involved in the recognition of invading antigens in lymph nodes.

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