The entry of peptides into glycobiology has led to the development of a unique class of therapeutic tools. Although numerous and well-known peptides are active as endocrine regulatory factors that bind to specific receptors, and peptides have been used extensively as epitopes for vaccine production, the use of peptides that mimic sugars as ligands of lectin-type receptors has opened a unique approach to modulate activity of immune cells. Ground-breaking work that initiated the use of peptides as tools for therapy identified sugar mimetics by screening phage display libraries.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe integrity of the skin is an important aspect of QOL. Whether caused by genetic deficiencies or environmental insults, disruption of the surface barrier allows irritants and allergens to penetrate the skin, which initiates inflammatory responses by immune cells that often lead to life-long allergies. In this study, eczema was induced on depilated mouse skin with topical lipopolysaccharide or a mixture of Staphylococcal enterotoxin B and an extract of house dust mites, which resulted in thickening of the epidermis, epidermal disruption, and abundant neutrophils in the dermis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFKeratohyalin granules were discovered in the mid-19th century in cells that terminally differentiate to form the outer, cornified layer of the epidermis. The first indications of the composition of these structures emerged in the 1960s from a histochemical stain for histidine, followed by radioautographic evidence of a high incidence of histidine incorporation into newly synthesized proteins in cells containing the granules. Research during the next three decades revealed the structure and function of a major protein in these granules, which was initially called the 'histidine-rich protein'.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhagocytic cells [dendritic cells (DCs), macrophages, monocytes, neutrophils, and mast cells] utilize C-type (Ca-dependent) lectin-like (CLEC) receptors to identify and internalize pathogens or danger signals. As monitors of environmental imbalances, CLEC receptors are particularly important in the function of DCs. Activation of the immune system requires, in sequence, presentation of antigen to the T cell receptor (TCR) by DCs, interaction of co-stimulatory factors such as CD40/80/86 on DCs with CD40L and CD28 on T cells, and production of IL-12 and/or IFN-α/β to amplify T cell differentiation and expansion.
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