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Publication : JNK1 negatively controls antifungal innate immunity by suppressing CD23 expression.

First Author  Zhao X Year  2017
Journal  Nat Med Volume  23
Issue  3 Pages  337-346
PubMed ID  28112734 Mgi Jnum  J:251278
Mgi Id  MGI:6103642 Doi  10.1038/nm.4260
Citation  Zhao X, et al. (2017) JNK1 negatively controls antifungal innate immunity by suppressing CD23 expression. Nat Med 23(3):337-346
abstractText  Opportunistic fungal infections are a leading cause of death among immune-compromised patients, and there is a pressing need to develop new antifungal therapeutic agents because of toxicity and resistance to the antifungal drugs currently in use. Although C-type lectin receptor- and Toll-like receptor-induced signaling pathways are key activators of host antifungal immunity, little is known about the mechanisms that negatively regulate host immune responses to a fungal infection. Here we found that JNK1 activation suppresses antifungal immunity in mice. We showed that JNK1-deficient mice had a significantly higher survival rate than wild-type control mice in response to Candida albicans infection, and the expression of JNK1 in hematopoietic innate immune cells was critical for this effect. JNK1 deficiency leads to significantly higher induction of CD23, a novel C-type lectin receptor, through NFATc1-mediated regulation of the CD23 gene promoter. Blocking either CD23 upregulation or CD23-dependent nitric oxide production eliminated the enhanced antifungal response found in JNK1-deficient mice. Notably, JNK inhibitors exerted potent antifungal therapeutic effects in both mouse and human cells infected with C. albicans, indicating that JNK1 may be a therapeutic target for treating fungal infection.
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