Abstract
BackgroundExposure to fungi, especially Aspergillus fumigatus (A.f.), can elicit potent allergic inflammation that triggers and worsens asthmatic disease. Dendritic cells (DCs), initiate allergic inflammatory responses to allergic stimuli. However, it is unclear if A.f. spores during isotropic growth (early spore swelling) can activate DCs to initiate allergic responses or if germination is required. This lack of basic understanding of how A.f. causes disease is a barrier to the development of new treatments. ObjectiveTo show that a precise A.f. morphotype stage during spore swelling can trigger DCs to mediate allergic inflammatory responses and ascertain if antifungal therapeutics can be effective at suppressing this process. MethodsWe employed an A.f. strain deficient in pyrimidine biosynthesis (ΔpyrG) to generate populations of A.f. spores arrested at different stages of isotropic growth (swelling) via temporal removal of uracil and uridine from growth media. These arrested spore stages were cultured with bone marrow derived DCs (BMDCs), and their activation measured via flow cytometry and ELISA to interrogate which growth stage was able to activate BMDCs. These BMDCs were then adoptively transferred into the airways, to assess if they were able to mediate allergic inflammation in naive recipient mice. Allergic airway inflammation in vivo was determined via flow cytometry, ELISA and qPCR. This system was also used to determine if antifungal drug (itraconazole) treatment could alter early stages of spore swelling and therefore BMDC activation and in vivo allergic inflammation upon adoptive transfer. ResultsWe found that A.f. isotropic growth is essential to trigger BMDC activation and mediate allergic airway inflammation. Furthermore, using time arrested A.f. stages, we found that least 3h in growth media enabled spores to swell sufficiently to activate BMDCs to elicit allergic airway inflammation in vivo. Incubation of germinating A.f. with itraconazole reduced spore swelling and partially reduced their ability to activate BMDCs to elicit in vivo allergic airway inflammation. ConclusionIn summary, our results have pinpointed the precise stage of A.f. development when germinating spores are able to activate DCs to mediate downstream allergic airway inflammation. Furthermore, we have identified that antifungal therapeutics partially reduced the potential of A.f. spores to stimulate allergic responses, highlighting a potential mechanism by which antifungal treatment might help to prevent the development of fungal allergy.
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