Our results implicate c-typelectin pathways in ACL homeostasis.
2
Despite the C-typelectin domain structure, none of the interactions require calcium.
3
By contrast, this process is mediated by a newly described C-typelectin, DC-SIGN.
4
However, the precise roles of these C-typelectin receptors in skin wound healing remain unclear.
5
One such family of receptors are the C-typelectins, which are central to antifungal immunity.
6
One of the receptors that facilitate DC-specific targeting of antigens is the DC-specific C-typelectin DC-SIGN.
7
C-typelectin receptors and their adaptor molecules are involved in the recognition of glycosylated self-antigens and pathogens.
8
Many members of the C-typelectin receptor family serve as pattern recognition receptors facilitating pathogen uptake, antigen processing, and immunomodulation.
9
We have determined the three-dimensional structure of the C-typelectin domain of CD23 in solution by nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy.
10
Thus H. pylori-specific modification of host cholesterol plays a pathophysiological role that exacerbates gastric inflammation by triggering C-typelectin receptors.
11
Here, we report that H. pylori metabolites modified from host cholesterol exacerbate gastritis through the interaction with C-typelectin receptors.
12
Int280 comprises three domains; two immunoglobulin-like domains and a C-typelectin-like module, which define a new family of bacterial adhesion molecules.
13
Molecular cloning has shown that CD69 is a type II membrane glycoprotein that is a member of the C-typelectin family.
14
Once such receptor is Dectin-1, a myeloid expressed signalling C-typelectin-like receptor which is involved in the innate recognition of fungal pathogens.
15
DC-SIGN is a C-typelectin expressed by dendritic cells that HIV-1 may bind and utilize for enhanced infection of T cells in trans.
16
The orphan receptor CLEC-1 is part of a subfamily of C-typelectin-like receptors, which is encoded in the human natural killer gene …