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A Toll-like receptor recognizes bacterial DNA (vol 408, pg 740, 2000)
[摘要] DNA from bacteria has stimulatory effects on mammalian immune cells(1-3), which depend on the presence of unmethylated CpG dinucleotides in the bacterial DNA. In contrast, mammalian DNA has a low frequency of CpG dinucleotides, and these are mostly methylated; therefore, mammalian DNA does not have immuno-stimulatory activity. CpG DNA induces a strong T-helper-1-like inflammatory response(4-7). Accumulating evidence has revealed the therapeutic potential of CpG DNA as adjuvants for vaccination strategies for cancer, allergy and infectious diseases(8-10). Despite its promising clinical use, the molecular mechanism by which CpG DNA activates immune cells remains unclear. Here we show that cellular response to CpG DNA is mediated by a Toll-like receptor, TLR9. TLR9-deficient (TLR9(-/-)) mice did not show any response to CpG DNA, including proliferation of splenocytes, inflammatory cytokine production from macrophages and maturation of dendritic cells. TLR9(-/-) mice showed resistance to the lethal effect of CpG DNA without any elevation of serum pro-inflammatory cytokine levels. The in vivo CpG-DNA-mediated T-helper type-1 response was also abolished in TLR9(-/-) mice. Thus, vertebrate immune systems appear to have evolved a specific Toll-like receptor that distinguishes bacterial DNA from self-DNA.
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[关键词] CELL WALL COMPONENTS;DENDRITIC CELLS;CUTTING EDGE;CPG-DNA;DROSOPHILA TOLL;ACTIVATION;MATURATION;MOTIFS;MICE;TLR4 [时效性] 
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