Abstract

Dendritic cell-specific intercellular adhesion molecule-3-grabbing nonintegrin (DC-SIGN) is a cell surface C-type lectin expressed on myeloid dendritic cells and certain tissue macrophages, which mediates antigen capture for processing and presentation and participates in intercellular interactions with naive T lymphocytes or endothelial cells. In their strategy to evade immunosurveillance, numerous pathogenic microorganisms, including human immunodeficiency virus and Mycobacterium, bind to DC-SIGN in order to gain access to dendritic cells. We present evidence that PU.1 dictates the basal and cell-specific activity of DC-SIGN gene-regulatory region through in vivo occupancy of two functional Ets elements, whose integrity is required for PU.1 responsiveness and for the cooperative actions of PU.1 and other transcription factors (Myb, RUNX) on the DC-SIGN gene proximal regulatory region. In addition, protein analysis and gene profiling experiments indicate that DC-SIGN and PU.1 are coordinately expressed upon classical and alternative macrophage activation and during dendritic cell maturation. Moreover, small interfering RNA-mediated reduction of PU.1 expression results in diminished DC-SIGN cellular levels. Altogether, these results indicate that PU.1 is involved in the myeloid-specific expression of DC-SIGN in myeloid cells, a contribution that can be framed within the role that PU.1 has on the acquisition of the antigen uptake molecular repertoire by dendritic cells and macrophages.

Highlights

  • Synovial, placenta, and alveolar macrophages and on a small subset of CD14ϩ peripheral blood dendritic cell (DC) (6 –9)

  • To analyze the DNA elements and transcription factors that direct the expression of Dendritic cell-specific intercellular adhesion molecule-3-grabbing nonintegrin (DC-SIGN), we amplified by PCR a genomic region of the DC-SIGN gene (Ϫ1656/Ϫ19) where, in agreement with a previous report [36], preliminary 5Ј-rapid amplification of cDNA ends experiments mapped the DC-SIGN transcriptional start sites

  • We present evidence that the PU.1 transcription factor is involved in the basal and tissue-specific expression of DC-SIGN through occupancy of two DNA elements within the proximal regulatory region of the DC-SIGN gene

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Summary

Introduction

Synovial, placenta, and alveolar macrophages and on a small subset of CD14ϩ peripheral blood DC (6 –9). We describe the coordinated expression of PU.1 and DC-SIGN during macrophage activation and dendritic cell maturation and the critical contribution of PU.1 to the basal and tissue-specific activity of the DC-SIGN gene proximal regulatory region through occupancy of two closely located binding sites.

Results
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