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      Differential expression of the fractalkine chemokine receptor (CX3CR1) in human monocytes during differentiation.

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          Abstract

          Circulating monocytes (Mos) may continuously repopulate macrophage (MAC) or dendritic cell (DC) populations to maintain homeostasis. MACs and DCs are specialized cells that play different and complementary immunological functions. Accordingly, they present distinct migratory properties. Specifically, whereas MACs largely remain in tissues, DCs are capable of migrating from peripheral tissues to lymphoid organs. The aim of this work was to analyze the expression of the fractalkine receptor (CX3CR1) during the monocytic differentiation process. Freshly isolated Mos express high levels of both CX3CR1 mRNA and protein. During the Mo differentiation process, CX3CR1 is downregulated in both DCs and MACs. However, MACs showed significantly higher CX3CR1 expression levels than did DC. We also observed an antagonistic CX3CR1 regulation by interferon (IFN)-γ and interleukin (IL)-4 during MAC activation through the classical and alternative MAC pathways, respectively. IFN-γ inhibited the loss of CX3CR1, but IL-4 induced it. Additionally, we demonstrated an association between CX3CR1 expression and apoptosis prevention by soluble fractalkine (sCX3CL1) in Mos, DCs and MACs. This is the first report demonstrating sequential and differential CX3CR1 modulation during Mo differentiation. Most importantly, we demonstrated a functional link between CX3CR1 expression and cell survival in the presence of sCX3CL1.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Cell. Mol. Immunol.
          Cellular & molecular immunology
          Springer Nature
          2042-0226
          1672-7681
          Nov 2015
          : 12
          : 6
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Laboratorio de Patogénesis e Inmunología de Procesos Infecciosos, Instituto de Medicina Experimental (IMEX-CONICET), Academia Nacional de Medicina, Buenos Aires, Argentina.
          [2 ] Laboratorio de Células Presentadoras de Antígeno y Respuesta Inflamatoria, IMEX-CONICET, Academia Nacional de Medicina, Buenos Aires, Argentina.
          Article
          cmi2014116
          10.1038/cmi.2014.116
          4716621
          25502213
          d52eb903-c609-4a08-be8b-0e7385aa7379
          History

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