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      Human Siglec-5: tissue distribution, novel isoforms and domain specificities for sialic acid-dependent ligand interactions.

      1 , ,
      British journal of haematology
      Wiley

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          Abstract

          Human Siglec-5 is a sialic acid binding immunoglobulin (Ig)-like lectin (Siglec), comprising one N-terminal IgV-SET domain followed by three IgC2-SET domains, and a cytoplasmic domain with ITIM and SAP motifs which regulate cell signalling. We report the differential distribution of hSiglec-5 on neutrophil and macrophage subsets in tissues using monoclonal antibodies, 1A5 and 2H8, which require the first IgC2-SET domain for binding. Interestingly, hSiglec-5 was especially prominent on macrophages in reactive lymph nodes. We have identified four isoforms of hSiglec-5 possessing three (hSiglec-5-3L and -3C) or four (hSiglec-5-4L and -4S) extracellular domains linked to long (hSiglec-5-3L and -4L) or short (hSiglec-5-4S) cytoplasmic tails or existing as a soluble isoform (hSiglec-5-3C). hSiglec-5-4L has the broadest tissue distribution, being detected in adult spleen, thymus, lymph node, peripheral blood leucocytes and bone marrow, and in fetal lung and liver. A soluble Fc chimaeric protein containing the hSiglec-5-4L extracellular domain binds in a sialic acid-dependent manner to glycophorin A on human erythrocytes and to alpha2-3- and alpha2-6-sialyllactose moieties. Domain deletion mutants of hSiglec-5(D1-4)-Fc reveal that the first three IgC2-SET domains are required for optimal binding, with adhesion being abolished if the first IgC2-SET domain is deleted. This indicates that each hSiglec-5 isoform will interact with sialic acid ligands and provides the first step towards defining structure-function relationships of hSiglec-5 isoforms.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Br. J. Haematol.
          British journal of haematology
          Wiley
          0007-1048
          0007-1048
          Oct 2002
          : 119
          : 1
          Affiliations
          [1 ] National Blood Service, Stem Cell Laboratory, National Blood Service Oxford Centre, John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford, UK.
          Article
          3808
          10.1046/j.1365-2141.2002.03808.x
          12358929
          14f54514-a03b-464c-a062-a5940590a2f8
          History

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