Saltar al contenido
MilliporeSigma

Soluble TREM-like transcript-1 regulates leukocyte activation and controls microbial sepsis.

Journal of immunology (Baltimore, Md. : 1950) (2012-05-04)
Marc Derive, Youcef Bouazza, Nacira Sennoun, Sandra Marchionni, Laura Quigley, Valance Washington, Frédéric Massin, Jean-Pierre Max, Jill Ford, Corentine Alauzet, Bruno Levy, Daniel W McVicar, Sébastien Gibot
RESUMEN

The triggering receptor expressed on myeloid cells (TREM)-1 plays a crucial role during the onset of sepsis by amplifying the host immune response. The TREM-like transcript-1 (TLT-1) belongs to the TREM family, is selectively expressed on activated platelets, and is known to facilitate platelet aggregation through binding to fibrinogen. In this study, we show that a soluble form of TLT-1 is implicated in the regulation of inflammation during sepsis by dampening leukocyte activation and modulating platelet-neutrophil crosstalk. A 17-aa sequence of the TLT-1 extracellular domain (LR17) is responsible for this activity through competition with the TREM-1 ligand. Whereas early or late LR17 treatment of septic mice improves survival, treml-1(-/-) animals are highly susceptible to polymicrobial infection. The present findings identify platelet-derived soluble TLT-1 as a potent endogenous regulator of sepsis-associated inflammation and open new therapeutic perspectives. We anticipate soluble TLT-1 to be important in regulating leukocyte activation during other noninfectious inflammatory disorders.