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Eros is a novel transmembrane protein that controls the phagocyte respiratory burst and is essential for innate immunity.

David C ThomasSimon ClareJohn M SowerbyMercedes Calvo PardoJatinder K JussDavid A GouldingLouise van der WeydenDaniel M L StoristeanuAnanth PrakashMarion EspéliShaun M FlintJames C LeeKim HoenderdosLeanne KaneKatherine HarcourtSubhankar MukhopadhyayYagnesh UmraniaRobin AntrobusJames A NathanDavid J AdamsAlex BatemanJyoti Sharma ChoudharyPaul A LyonsAlison M CondliffeEdwin R ChilversGordon DouganKenneth G C Smith
Published in: The Journal of experimental medicine (2017)
The phagocyte respiratory burst is crucial for innate immunity. The transfer of electrons to oxygen is mediated by a membrane-bound heterodimer, comprising gp91phox and p22phox subunits. Deficiency of either subunit leads to severe immunodeficiency. We describe Eros (essential for reactive oxygen species), a protein encoded by the previously undefined mouse gene bc017643, and show that it is essential for host defense via the phagocyte NAPDH oxidase. Eros is required for expression of the NADPH oxidase components, gp91phox and p22phox Consequently, Eros-deficient mice quickly succumb to infection. Eros also contributes to the formation of neutrophil extracellular traps (NETS) and impacts on the immune response to melanoma metastases. Eros is an ortholog of the plant protein Ycf4, which is necessary for expression of proteins of the photosynthetic photosystem 1 complex, itself also an NADPH oxio-reductase. We thus describe the key role of the previously uncharacterized protein Eros in host defense.
Keyphrases
  • reactive oxygen species
  • binding protein
  • poor prognosis
  • protein protein
  • small molecule
  • gene expression
  • long non coding rna
  • genome wide identification