Interplay Between Sialic Acids, Siglec-E, and Neu1 Regulates MyD88- and TRIF-Dependent Pathways for TLR4-Activation During Leishmania donovani Infection

TLR4 activates two distinct signaling pathways involving adaptors MyD88 and TRIF to produce proinflammatory cytokines and type-I interferon respectively. How Leishmania donovani suppresses these pathways is not well studied. We earlier reported, TLR4 is hypersialylated due to reduced membrane-bound neuraminidase (Neu1) on infected-macrophages. We hypothesized that such enhanced sialoglycoconjugates on host cells may modulate the interactions with siglecs- which are the inhibitory receptors. Here, we examined the impact of such sialylation on overall TLR4 activation both in murine cell line J774A.1 and primary bone marrow derived macrophages (BMDM). Supporting this hypothesis, we demonstrated siglec-E engages hypersialylated TLR4 during infection. Such sialic acids-siglec-E interaction enhanced siglec-E phosphorylation that mediated its strong association with SHP1/SHP2 and also upregulated their phosphorylation in both types of macrophages. Pre-treatment of parasites and host cells with neuraminidase reduced SHP1/SHP2 phosphorylation and triggered TLR4 activation respectively through enhanced nuclear translocation of p-65. Moreover, a reciprocal interplay between Neu1 and siglec-E differentially regulates MyD88- and TRIF-pathways through sialic acids on TLR4 as their common substrate during infection. Correspondingly, Neu1 overexpression enhanced MyD88-signaling while still suppressing TRIF-activation. However, silencing siglec-E specifically activated TRIF-signaling. Pro-inf...
Source: Frontiers in Immunology - Category: Allergy & Immunology Source Type: research