TLRs are present in
vertebrates as well as
invertebrates. Molecular building blocks of the TLRs are represented in bacteria and in plants, and
plant pattern recognition receptors are well known to be required for host defence against infection. The TLRs thus appear to be one of the most ancient, conserved components of the
immune system. In recent years TLRs were identified also in the mammalian nervous system. Members of the TLR family were detected on glia, neurons and on neural progenitor cells in which they regulate cell-fate decision. It has been estimated that most mammalian species have between ten and fifteen types of toll-like receptors. Thirteen TLRs (named simply TLR1 to TLR13) have been identified in humans and mice together, and equivalent forms of many of these have been found in other mammalian species. However, equivalents of certain TLR found in humans are not present in all mammals. For example, a gene coding for a protein analogous to TLR10 in humans is present in
mice, but appears to have been damaged at some point in the past by a
retrovirus. On the other hand, mice express TLRs 11, 12, and 13, none of which is represented in humans. Other mammals may express TLRs that are not found in humans. Other non-mammalian species may have TLRs distinct from mammals, as demonstrated by the anti-cell-wall
TLR14, which is found in the
Takifugu pufferfish. This may complicate the process of using experimental animals as models of human innate immunity. Vertebrate TLRs are divided by similarity into the families of TLR 1/2/6/10/14/15, TLR 3, TLR 4, TLR 5, TLR 7/8/9, and TLR 11/12/13/16/21/22/23. The involvement of toll signalling in immunity was first demonstrated in the fruit fly,
Drosophila melanogaster. Fruit flies have only innate immune responses allowing studies to avoid interference of adaptive immune mechanisms on signal transduction. The fly response to fungal or bacterial infection occurs through two distinct signalling cascades, one of which is the toll pathway and the other is the
immune deficiency pathway. The toll pathway is similar to mammalian TLR signalling, but unlike mammalian TLRs, toll is not activated directly by pathogen-associated molecular patterns (
PAMPs). Its receptor ectodomain recognizes the cleaved form of the cytokine spätzle, which is secreted in the
haemolymph as an inactive dimeric precursor. The toll receptor shares the cytoplasmatic TIR domain with mammalian TLRs, but the ectodomain and intracytoplasmatic tail are different. This difference might reflect a function of these receptors as cytokine receptors rather than
PRRs. The toll pathway is activated by different stimuli, such as
gram-positive bacteria, fungi, and
virulence factors. First, the Spätzle processing enzyme (SPE) is activated in response to infection and cleaves
spätzle (
spz). Cleaved spätzle then binds to the toll receptor and crosslinks its ectodomains. This triggers conformational changes in the receptor resulting in signalling through toll. From this point forward, the signalling cascade is very similar to mammalian signalling through TLRs. The toll-induced signalling complex (TICS) is composed of
MyD88, Tube, and Pelle (the orthologue of mammalian IRAK). Signal from TICS is then transduced to Cactus (homologue of mammalian
IκB), phosphorylated Cactus is polyubiquitylated and degraded, allowing nuclear translocation of DIF (dorsal-related immunity factor; a homologue of mammalian
NF-κB) and induction of transcription of genes for
antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) such as
drosomycin.
Drosophila have a total of 9
toll family and 6
spz family genes that interact with each other to differing degrees.
TLR2 TLR2 has also been designated as CD282 (cluster of differentiation 282).
TLR3 TLR3 does not use the MyD88 dependent pathway. Its ligand is retroviral double-stranded RNA (
dsRNA), which activates the
TRIF dependent signalling pathway. To explore the role of this pathway in retroviral reprograming, knock down techniques of TLR3 or TRIF were prepared, and results showed that only the TLR3 pathway is required for full induction of target gene expression by the retrovirus expression vector. This retroviral expression of four transcriptional factors (
Oct4,
Sox2,
Klf4 and
c-Myc; OSKM) induces
pluripotency in somatic cells. This is supported by study, which shows, that efficiency and amount of human iPSC generation, using retroviral vectors, is reduced by knockdown of the pathway with peptide inhibitors or
shRNA knockdown of TLR3 or its adaptor protein TRIF. Taken together, stimulation of TLR3 causes great changes in chromatin remodeling and nuclear reprogramming, and activation of inflammatory pathways is required for these changes, induction of pluripotency genes and generation of human induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSC) colonies.
TLR11 As noted above, human cells do not express
TLR11, but mice cells do. Mouse-specific TLR11 recognizes uropathogenic
E.coli and the apicomplexan parasite
Toxoplasma gondii. With
Toxoplasma its ligand is the protein profilin and the ligand for
E. coli is
flagellin. The flagellin from the enteropathogen
Salmonella is also recognized by TLR11. == Summary of known mammalian TLRs ==