Programmed cell removal by calreticulin in tissue homeostasis and cancer

Mingye Feng(California Institute for Regenerative Medicine), Kristopher D. Marjon(California Institute for Regenerative Medicine), Fangfang Zhu(California Institute for Regenerative Medicine), Rachel Weissman-Tsukamoto(California Institute for Regenerative Medicine), Aaron Levett(California Institute for Regenerative Medicine), Katie L. Sullivan(California Institute for Regenerative Medicine), Kevin S. Kao(California Institute for Regenerative Medicine), Maxim Markovic(California Institute for Regenerative Medicine), Paul Bump(California Institute for Regenerative Medicine), Hannah M. Jackson(California Institute for Regenerative Medicine), Timothy Choi(California Institute for Regenerative Medicine), Jing Chen(Sichuan University), Allison Banuelos(California Institute for Regenerative Medicine), Jie Liu(California Institute for Regenerative Medicine), Phung Gip(California Institute for Regenerative Medicine), Lei Cheng(Sichuan University), Denong Wang(SRI International), Irving L. Weissman(California Institute for Regenerative Medicine)
Nature Communications
August 6, 2018
Cited by 158Open Access
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Abstract

Macrophage-mediated programmed cell removal (PrCR) is a process essential for the clearance of unwanted (damaged, dysfunctional, aged, or harmful) cells. The detection and recognition of appropriate target cells by macrophages is a critical step for successful PrCR, but its molecular mechanisms have not been delineated. Here using the models of tissue turnover, cancer immunosurveillance, and hematopoietic stem cells, we show that unwanted cells such as aging neutrophils and living cancer cells are susceptible to "labeling" by secreted calreticulin (CRT) from macrophages, enabling their clearance through PrCR. Importantly, we identified asialoglycans on the target cells to which CRT binds to regulate PrCR, and the availability of such CRT-binding sites on cancer cells correlated with the prognosis of patients in various malignancies. Our study reveals a general mechanism of target cell recognition by macrophages, which is the key for the removal of unwanted cells by PrCR in physiological and pathophysiological processes.


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