4.5 Article

Subchronic exposures to fungal bioaerosols promotes allergic pulmonary inflammation in naive mice

Journal

CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL ALLERGY
Volume 46, Issue 6, Pages 861-870

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/cea.12724

Keywords

allergy; Aspergillus fumigatus; asthma; fungi; immunotoxicity; subchronic

Funding

  1. NIOSH [927ZLCT]
  2. CDC/NIOSH [AES12007001-1-0-6]
  3. National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) [AES12007001-1-0-6]

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BackgroundEpidemiological surveys indicate that occupants of mold contaminated environments are at increased risk of respiratory symptoms. The immunological mechanisms associated with these responses require further characterization. ObjectiveThe aim of this study was to characterize the immunotoxicological outcomes following repeated inhalation of dry Aspergillus fumigatus spores aerosolized at concentrations potentially encountered in contaminated indoor environments. MethodsAspergillus fumigatus spores were delivered to the lungs of naive BALB/cJ mice housed in a multi-animal nose-only chamber twice a week for a period of 13weeks. Mice were evaluated at 24 and 48h post-exposure for histopathological changes in lung architecture, recruitment of specific immune cells to the airways, and serum antibody responses. ResultGerminating A.fumigatus spores were observed in lungs along with persistent fungal debris in the perivascular regions of the lungs. Repeated exposures promoted pleocellular infiltration with concomitant epithelial mucus hypersecretion, goblet cell metaplasia, subepithelial fibrosis and enhanced airway hyperreactivity. Cellular infiltration in airways was predominated by CD4(+) T cells expressing the pro-allergic cytokine IL-13. Furthermore, our studies show that antifungal T cell responses (IFN-(+) or IL-17A(+)) co-expressed IL-13, revealing a novel mechanism for the dysregulated immune response to inhaled fungi. Total IgE production was augmented in animals repeatedly exposed to A.fumigatus. Conclusions & Clinical RelevanceRepeated inhalation of fungal aerosols resulted in significant pulmonary pathology mediated by dynamic shifts in specific immune populations and their cytokines. These studies provide novel insights into the immunological mechanisms and targets that govern the health outcomes that result from repeated inhalation of fungal bioaerosols in contaminated environments.

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