4.5 Article

The IL-36 receptor pathway regulates Aspergillus fumigatus-induced Th1 and Th17 responses

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 43, Issue 2, Pages 416-426

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/eji.201242711

Keywords

IL-36; IL-36 receptor antagonist; Pattern recognition; Th responses

Categories

Funding

  1. Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research
  2. Niels Stensen foundation
  3. NCMLS grand
  4. NIH [AI-15614, AR-45584]

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IL-1 drives Th responses, particularly Th17, in host defense. Sharing the same co-receptor, the IL-1 family member IL-36 exhibits properties similar to those of IL-1. In the present study, we investigated the role of IL-36 in Aspergillus fumigatus-induced human Th responses. We observed that different morphological forms of A. fumigatus variably increase steady-state mRNA of IL-36 subfamily members. IL-36 is not significantly induced by any morphological form of Aspergillus. Most strikingly, IL-36 is significantly induced by live A. fumigatus conidia and heat-killed hyphae, whereas IL-36Ra (IL-36 receptor antagonist) is significantly induced by heat-killed conidia, hyphae, and live conidia. We also observed that IL-36 expression is dependent on the dectin-1/Syk and TLR4 signaling pathway. In contrast, TLR2 and CR3 inhibit IL-36 expression. The biological relevance of IL-36 induction by Aspergillus is demonstrated by experiments showing that inhibition of the IL-36 receptor by IL-36Ra reduces Aspergillus-induced IL-17 and IFN-. These data describe that IL-36-dependent signals are a novel cytokine pathway that regulates Th responses induced by A. fumigatus, and demonstrate a role for TLR4 and dectin-1 in the induction of IL-36 gamma.

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