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Bone Marrow Harbors a Unique Population of Dendritic Cells with the Potential to Boost Neutrophil Formation upon Exposure to Fungal Antigen

Apart from controlling hematopoiesis, the bone marrow (BM) also serves as a secondary lymphoid organ, as it can induce naïve T cell priming by resident dendritic cells (DC). When analyzing DCs in murine BM, we uncovered that they are localized around sinusoids, can (cross)-present antigens, become a...

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Autores principales: Goedhart, Marieke, Slot, Edith, Pascutti, Maria F., Geerman, Sulima, Rademakers, Timo, Nota, Benjamin, Huveneers, Stephan, van Buul, Jaap D., MacNamara, Katherine C., Voermans, Carlijn, Nolte, Martijn A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8750392/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35011617
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cells11010055
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author Goedhart, Marieke
Slot, Edith
Pascutti, Maria F.
Geerman, Sulima
Rademakers, Timo
Nota, Benjamin
Huveneers, Stephan
van Buul, Jaap D.
MacNamara, Katherine C.
Voermans, Carlijn
Nolte, Martijn A.
author_facet Goedhart, Marieke
Slot, Edith
Pascutti, Maria F.
Geerman, Sulima
Rademakers, Timo
Nota, Benjamin
Huveneers, Stephan
van Buul, Jaap D.
MacNamara, Katherine C.
Voermans, Carlijn
Nolte, Martijn A.
author_sort Goedhart, Marieke
collection PubMed
description Apart from controlling hematopoiesis, the bone marrow (BM) also serves as a secondary lymphoid organ, as it can induce naïve T cell priming by resident dendritic cells (DC). When analyzing DCs in murine BM, we uncovered that they are localized around sinusoids, can (cross)-present antigens, become activated upon intravenous LPS-injection, and for the most part belong to the cDC2 subtype which is associated with Th2/Th17 immunity. Gene-expression profiling revealed that BM-resident DCs are enriched for several c-type lectins, including Dectin-1, which can bind beta-glucans expressed on fungi and yeast. Indeed, DCs in BM were much more efficient in phagocytosis of both yeast-derived zymosan-particles and Aspergillus conidiae than their splenic counterparts, which was highly dependent on Dectin-1. DCs in human BM could also phagocytose zymosan, which was dependent on β1-integrins. Moreover, zymosan-stimulated BM-resident DCs enhanced the differentiation of hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells towards neutrophils, while also boosting the maintenance of these progenitors. Our findings signify an important role for BM DCs as translators between infection and hematopoiesis, particularly in anti-fungal immunity. The ability of BM-resident DCs to boost neutrophil formation is relevant from a clinical perspective and contributes to our understanding of the increased susceptibility for fungal infections following BM damage.
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spelling pubmed-87503922022-01-12 Bone Marrow Harbors a Unique Population of Dendritic Cells with the Potential to Boost Neutrophil Formation upon Exposure to Fungal Antigen Goedhart, Marieke Slot, Edith Pascutti, Maria F. Geerman, Sulima Rademakers, Timo Nota, Benjamin Huveneers, Stephan van Buul, Jaap D. MacNamara, Katherine C. Voermans, Carlijn Nolte, Martijn A. Cells Article Apart from controlling hematopoiesis, the bone marrow (BM) also serves as a secondary lymphoid organ, as it can induce naïve T cell priming by resident dendritic cells (DC). When analyzing DCs in murine BM, we uncovered that they are localized around sinusoids, can (cross)-present antigens, become activated upon intravenous LPS-injection, and for the most part belong to the cDC2 subtype which is associated with Th2/Th17 immunity. Gene-expression profiling revealed that BM-resident DCs are enriched for several c-type lectins, including Dectin-1, which can bind beta-glucans expressed on fungi and yeast. Indeed, DCs in BM were much more efficient in phagocytosis of both yeast-derived zymosan-particles and Aspergillus conidiae than their splenic counterparts, which was highly dependent on Dectin-1. DCs in human BM could also phagocytose zymosan, which was dependent on β1-integrins. Moreover, zymosan-stimulated BM-resident DCs enhanced the differentiation of hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells towards neutrophils, while also boosting the maintenance of these progenitors. Our findings signify an important role for BM DCs as translators between infection and hematopoiesis, particularly in anti-fungal immunity. The ability of BM-resident DCs to boost neutrophil formation is relevant from a clinical perspective and contributes to our understanding of the increased susceptibility for fungal infections following BM damage. MDPI 2021-12-24 /pmc/articles/PMC8750392/ /pubmed/35011617 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cells11010055 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Goedhart, Marieke
Slot, Edith
Pascutti, Maria F.
Geerman, Sulima
Rademakers, Timo
Nota, Benjamin
Huveneers, Stephan
van Buul, Jaap D.
MacNamara, Katherine C.
Voermans, Carlijn
Nolte, Martijn A.
Bone Marrow Harbors a Unique Population of Dendritic Cells with the Potential to Boost Neutrophil Formation upon Exposure to Fungal Antigen
title Bone Marrow Harbors a Unique Population of Dendritic Cells with the Potential to Boost Neutrophil Formation upon Exposure to Fungal Antigen
title_full Bone Marrow Harbors a Unique Population of Dendritic Cells with the Potential to Boost Neutrophil Formation upon Exposure to Fungal Antigen
title_fullStr Bone Marrow Harbors a Unique Population of Dendritic Cells with the Potential to Boost Neutrophil Formation upon Exposure to Fungal Antigen
title_full_unstemmed Bone Marrow Harbors a Unique Population of Dendritic Cells with the Potential to Boost Neutrophil Formation upon Exposure to Fungal Antigen
title_short Bone Marrow Harbors a Unique Population of Dendritic Cells with the Potential to Boost Neutrophil Formation upon Exposure to Fungal Antigen
title_sort bone marrow harbors a unique population of dendritic cells with the potential to boost neutrophil formation upon exposure to fungal antigen
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8750392/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35011617
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cells11010055
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