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Fungal sensing enhances neutrophil metabolic fitness by regulating antifungal Glut1 activity

Authors :
De-Dong Li
Chetan V. Jawale
Chunsheng Zhou
Li Lin
Giraldina J. Trevejo-Nunez
Syed A. Rahman
Steven J. Mullet
Jishnu Das
Stacy G. Wendell
Greg M. Delgoffe
Michail S. Lionakis
Sarah L. Gaffen
Partha S. Biswas
Source :
Cell Host Microbe
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Combating fungal pathogens poses metabolic challenges for neutrophils, key innate cells in anti-Candida albicans immunity, yet how host-pathogen interactions cause remodeling of the neutrophil metabolism is unclear. We show that neutrophils mediate renal immunity to disseminated candidiasis by upregulating glucose uptake via selective expression of glucose transporter 1 (Glut1). Mechanistically, dectin-1-mediated recognition of β-glucan leads to activation of PKCδ, which triggers phosphorylation, localization, and early glucose transport by a pool of pre-formed Glut1 in neutrophils. These events are followed by increased Glut1 gene transcription, leading to more sustained Glut1 accumulation, which is also dependent on the β-glucan/dectin-1/CARD9 axis. Card9-deficient neutrophils show diminished glucose incorporation in candidiasis. Neutrophil-specific Glut1-ablated mice exhibit increased mortality in candidiasis caused by compromised neutrophil phagocytosis, reactive oxygen species (ROS), and neutrophil extracellular trap (NET) formation. In human neutrophils, β-glucan triggers metabolic remodeling and enhances candidacidal function. Our data show that the host-pathogen interface increases glycolytic activity in neutrophils by regulating Glut1 expression, localization, and function.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cell Host Microbe
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8758329829f916b237ee715c848b13a1