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Publication : β-glucan-dependent shuttling of conidia from neutrophils to macrophages occurs during fungal infection establishment.

First Author  Pazhakh V Year  2019
Journal  PLoS Biol Volume  17
Issue  9 Pages  e3000113
PubMed ID  31483778 Mgi Jnum  J:279959
Mgi Id  MGI:6361369 Doi  10.1371/journal.pbio.3000113
Citation  Pazhakh V, et al. (2019) beta-glucan-dependent shuttling of conidia from neutrophils to macrophages occurs during fungal infection establishment. PLoS Biol 17(9):e3000113
abstractText  The initial host response to fungal pathogen invasion is critical to infection establishment and outcome. However, the diversity of leukocyte-pathogen interactions is only recently being appreciated. We describe a new form of interleukocyte conidial exchange called "shuttling." In Talaromyces marneffei and Aspergillus fumigatus zebrafish in vivo infections, live imaging demonstrated conidia initially phagocytosed by neutrophils were transferred to macrophages. Shuttling is unidirectional, not a chance event, and involves alterations of phagocyte mobility, intercellular tethering, and phagosome transfer. Shuttling kinetics were fungal-species-specific, implicating a fungal determinant. beta-glucan serves as a fungal-derived signal sufficient for shuttling. Murine phagocytes also shuttled in vitro. The impact of shuttling for microbiological outcomes of in vivo infections is difficult to specifically assess experimentally, but for these two pathogens, shuttling augments initial conidial redistribution away from fungicidal neutrophils into the favorable macrophage intracellular niche. Shuttling is a frequent host-pathogen interaction contributing to fungal infection establishment patterns.
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