Calcineurin regulates innate antifungal immunity in neutrophils

MB Greenblatt, A Aliprantis, B Hu… - Journal of Experimental …, 2010 - rupress.org
MB Greenblatt, A Aliprantis, B Hu, LH Glimcher
Journal of Experimental Medicine, 2010rupress.org
Patients taking immunosuppressive drugs, like cyclosporine A (CsA), that inhibit calcineurin
are highly susceptible to disseminated fungal infections, although it is unclear how these
drugs suppress resistance to these opportunistic pathogens. We show that in a mouse
model of disseminated Candida albicans infection, CsA-induced susceptibility to fungal
infection maps to the innate immune system. To further define the cell types targeted by CsA,
we generated mice with a conditional deletion of calcineurin B (CnB) in neutrophils. These …
Patients taking immunosuppressive drugs, like cyclosporine A (CsA), that inhibit calcineurin are highly susceptible to disseminated fungal infections, although it is unclear how these drugs suppress resistance to these opportunistic pathogens. We show that in a mouse model of disseminated Candida albicans infection, CsA-induced susceptibility to fungal infection maps to the innate immune system. To further define the cell types targeted by CsA, we generated mice with a conditional deletion of calcineurin B (CnB) in neutrophils. These mice displayed markedly decreased resistance to infection with C. albicans, and both CnB-deficient and CsA-treated neutrophils showed a defect in the ex vivo killing of C. albicans. In response to the fungal-derived pathogen-associated molecular pattern zymosan, neutrophils lacking CnB displayed impaired up-regulation of genes (IL-10, Cox2, Egr1, and Egr2) regulated by nuclear factor of activated T cells, the best characterized CnB substrate. This activity was Myd88 independent and was reproduced by stimulation with the β(1,3) glucan curdlan, indicating that dectin-1, rather than toll-like receptors, is the upstream activator of calcineurin. Our results suggest that disseminated fungal infections seen in CsA-treated patients are not just a general consequence of systemic suppression of adaptive immunity but are, rather, a result of the specific blockade of evolutionarily conserved innate pathways for fungal resistance.
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