| Literature DB >> 26973640 |
Vanessa Espinosa1, Amariliz Rivera2.
Abstract
Mycotic infections and their effect on the human condition have been widely overlooked and poorly surveilled by many health organizations even though mortality rates have increased in recent years. The increased usage of immunosuppressive and myeloablative therapies for the treatment of malignant as well as non-malignant diseases has contributed significantly to the increased incidence of fungal infections. Invasive fungal infections have been found to be responsible for at least 1.5 million deaths worldwide. About 90% of these deaths can be attributed to Cryptococcus, Candida, Aspergillus, and Pneumocystis. A better understanding of how the host immune system contains fungal infection is likely to facilitate the development of much needed novel antifungal therapies. Innate cells are responsible for the rapid recognition and containment of fungal infections and have been found to play essential roles in defense against multiple fungal pathogens. In this review we summarize our current understanding of host-fungi interactions with a focus on mechanisms of innate cell-mediated recognition and control of pulmonary aspergillosis.Entities:
Keywords: aspergillosis; dendritic cells (DC); innate cells; mechanisms of resistance; monocytes subsets; neutrophils
Year: 2016 PMID: 26973640 PMCID: PMC4776213 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2016.00272
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
Summary of innate cell defense in .
| Epithelial cells | Antimicrobial peptides such as lactoferrin, chitinase, and β-defensins |
| Alveolar macrophages | ROS and phagosomal acidification |
| Neutrophils | ROS generation via NADPH oxidase, lactoferrin production, NETosis, and through the release of antimicrobial proteases by degranulation |
| Eosinophils | Antimicrobial proteins present in their granules |
| Mast cells | Degranulate and release a variety of enzymes and bioactive substances, such as histamine and tryptase, that mediate pulmonary inflammation and airway constriction |
| Platelets | Damage the fungal cell wall upon exposure through the release microbicidal proteins stored in their granules |
| Natural killer cells | Release of perforins and cytokine production such as IFNγ |
| Conventional DCs | Function as an important regulator of the inflammatory response via IL-2 production |
| Plasmacytoid DCs | Type I IFN production, pET formation, and release of antifungal effector molecules such as zinc chelators like calprotectin and iron-binding proteins like lactoferrin |
| CCR2+ inflammatory monocytes | Differentiate into inflammatory macrophages or into TIP DCs, which are capable of internalization and elimination of conidia |
Figure 1Inhalation of . This immediate response results in the production of chemokines that promote the rapid recruitment of neutrophils followed by the subsequent arrival of monocytes, pDCs, mast cells, eosinophils and NK cells. All of these innate cells cooperate in the elimination of fungal conidia by producing a combination of cytokines and protective factors. ROS, reactive oxygen species; NETs, neutrophil extracellular traps; TNF, tumor necrosis factor; IFN, interferon; pDCs, plasmacytoid dendritic cells. We would like to thank Servier Medical Art (http://www.servier.com) for figure graphics of immune cells.