Frontiers in Microbiology (Jan 2015)
Protective host defense against disseminated candidiasis is impaired in mice expressing human interleukin-37
Abstract
The effect of the anti-inflammatory cytokine interleukin-37 (IL 37) on host defense against Candida infections remains unknown. We assessed the role of IL 37 in a murine model of disseminated candidiasis using mice transgenic for human IL 37 (hIL 37Tg). Upon exposure to C. albicans pseudohyphae, macrophages from hIL-37Tg mice release 39% less TNFα compared to cells from wild-type mice (P=0.01). In vivo, hIL 37Tg mice displayed a decreased capacity to recruit neutrophils to the site of infection. These defects were associated with increased mortality and organ fungal growth in hIL-37Tg compared to wild-type mice. We conclude that IL-37 interferes with the innate protective anti-Candida host response by reducing the production of proinflammatory cytokines and suppressing neutrophil recruitment in response to Candida, resulting in an increased susceptibility to disseminated candidiasis.
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