Abstract

Ligand-induced cellular signaling involved in interleukin 10 (IL-10) production by lamina propria macrophages (LPMs) during their interactions with commensal bacteria is not clearly understood. We previously showed, using mice lacking a C-type lectin MGL1/CD301a, that this molecule on colonic LPMs plays an important role in the induction of IL-10 upon interaction with commensal bacteria, Streptococcus sp.In the present report, we show that the physical engagement of MGL1/CD301a on LPMs with in-situ isolated Streptococcus sp. bacteria leads to IL-10 messenger RNA (mRNA) induction. Spleen tyrosine kinase (Syk), caspase recruitment domain 9 (CARD9) and extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK), but not NF-κB pathway, are shown to be indispensable for IL-10 mRNA induction after stimulation with heat-killed Streptococcus sp. Guanidine hydrochloride treatment of Streptococcus sp., which is known to extract bacterial cell surface glycan-rich components, abolished bacterial binding to recombinant MGL1/CD301a. The extract contained materials which bound rMGL1 in ELISA and appeared to induce IL-10 mRNA expression in LPMs in vitro. Lectin blotting showed that the extract contained glycoproteins that are considered as putative ligands for MGL1. Some human commensal Lactobacillus species also induced IL-10 mRNA expression by colonic LPMs in vitro, which depends on the presence of MGL1/CD301a and CARD9. The present results are the first to show that MGL1/CD301a acts as a signal transducer during colonic host–microbe interactions.

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