| Literature DB >> 32545735 |
Theo N Kirkland1, Joshua Fierer1,2.
Abstract
The innate immune system is critical for natural resistance to all pathogenic microorganisms, including fungi. The innate response plays a vital role in resistance to infections before the antigen-specific immune response and also influences antigen-specific adaptive immunity. There are many different receptors for the innate immune response to fungi, and some receptors have been found to play a significant role in the response to human infections with opportunistic fungi. Most human infections are caused by opportunistic fungi, but a small number of organisms are capable of causing infections in normal hosts. The primary pathogenic fungi that cause invasive infections include Blastomyces spp., Cryptococcus gattii, Coccidioides spp., Histoplasma spp., and Paracoccidioides spp. In this review of innate immune receptors that play a role in infections caused by these organisms, we find that innate immunity differs between organisms.Entities:
Keywords: CLR; TLR; fungi; innate immunity; microbial immunity; pathogenic fungi; receptors
Year: 2020 PMID: 32545735 PMCID: PMC7350247 DOI: 10.3390/vaccines8020303
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vaccines (Basel) ISSN: 2076-393X
Fungal pattern recognition receptors and their ligands.
| Pattern Recognition Receptor | Ligand | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|
| CLR a | Dectin-1 | β-(1,3)-glucan | [ |
| Dectin-2 | High mannose | [ | |
| Dectin-2/Dectin-3 | α-mannan | [ | |
| Mannose receptor | N-linked mannan | [ | |
| Mannose receptor | Chitin | [ | |
| Mincle b | α-mannan | [ | |
| Galectin-3 | β-(1,2)-mannoside | [ | |
| DC-SIGN | N-linked mannan | [ | |
| Others | NOD-2 c | Chitin | [ |
| TLR d | TLR-2 | Phospholipomannan | [ |
| TLR-2 | β-(1,6)-glucan | [ | |
| TLR-4 | O-linked mannans | [ | |
| TLR-7 | ssRNAe | [ | |
| TLR-9 | CpG DNA | [ | |
| TLR-9 | Chitin | [ |
Note: Some of the pattern recognition receptors and ligands that are involved in innate resistance to fungal infections. The biological responses elicited by receptor–ligand binding are discussed in the text. a C-type lectin receptors; b Macrophage inducible Ca2+-dependent lectin receptor; c Nucleotide-binding oligomerization domain-containing protein 2; d Toll-like receptors; e Single stranded RNA.
Figure 1Innate immune receptors and transcription factors. A simplified schematic summary of some of the receptors and intracellular transcription pathways for the innate immune response to fungi. FcR: Fc receptor; TLR: toll like receptor; syk: signal transduction kinase; MyD88: Myeloid differentiation primary response 88; CARD9: caspase recruitment domain family, member 9; TFs: transcription factors.
Summary of innate immune receptors in fungal infections.
| Organism | Innate Resistance | Acquired Response |
|---|---|---|
| CR3, CARD9-dependent | CARD9-dependent Dectin-2, Dectin-3, MR | |
| Dectin-1 | CARD9-dependent Dectin-2 | |
| CARD9-dependent | ? | |
| MyD88-dependent TLR-7/9 a,b | CARD9-dependent Dectin-2 | |
| Resistance - Dectin-1 | ? |
Conclusions about the receptors involved in innate resistance to infection and the immune response to infection. They are based on in vivo data reviewed in this paper. However, the effects of many receptors on innate resistance and acquired immunity have not been tested. a Receptors involved in phagocytosis are CR3 and Dectin-1; b receptors involved in cytokine production are Dectin-1, Dectin-2, TLR-2, and CR3. CR3; complement receptor 3; CARD9: caspase recruitment domain family, member 9; MyD88: Myeloid differentiation primary response 88; FcRγ: Fcγ receptor; TLR-2: toll like receptor 2; IL-18R: IL-18 receptor.