Signal-regulatory protein is selectively expressed by myeloid and neuronal cells

S Adams, LJW van der Laan… - The Journal of …, 1998 - journals.aai.org
S Adams, LJW van der Laan, E Vernon-Wilson, C Renardel de Lavalette, EA Döpp…
The Journal of Immunology, 1998journals.aai.org
Signal-regulatory proteins (SIRP) are transmembrane glycoproteins with three extracellular
Ig-like domains, closely related to Ag receptors Ig, TCR, and MHC, and a cytoplasmic
domain with two immunoreceptor with tyrosine-based inhibition motifs that can interact with
src homology 2 domain-containing phosphatases. SIRP have previously been shown to
inhibit signaling through receptor tyrosine kinases, but their physiologic function is unknown.
Here we demonstrate by expression cloning that the mAbs ED9, ED17, and MRC-OX41 …
Abstract
Signal-regulatory proteins (SIRP) are transmembrane glycoproteins with three extracellular Ig-like domains, closely related to Ag receptors Ig, TCR, and MHC, and a cytoplasmic domain with two immunoreceptor with tyrosine-based inhibition motifs that can interact with src homology 2 domain-containing phosphatases. SIRP have previously been shown to inhibit signaling through receptor tyrosine kinases, but their physiologic function is unknown. Here we demonstrate by expression cloning that the mAbs ED9, ED17, and MRC-OX41 recognize rat SIRP. In addition, we show for the first time that rat SIRP is selectively expressed by myeloid cells (macrophages, monocytes, granulocytes, dendritic cells) and neurons. Moreover, SIRP ligation induces nitric oxide production by macrophages. This implicates SIRP as a putative recognition/signaling receptor in both immune and nervous systems.
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