C5a-licensed phagocytes drive sterilizing immunity during systemic fungal infection

  • Jigar V Desai
  • Dhaneshwar Kumar
  • Tilo Freiwald
  • Daniel Chauss
  • Melissa D Johnson
  • Michael S Abers
  • Julie M Steinbrink
  • John R Perfect
  • Barbara Alexander
  • Vasiliki Matzaraki
  • Brendan D Snarr
  • Marissa A Zarakas
  • Vasileios Oikonomou
  • Lakmali M Silva
  • Raju Shivarathri
  • Emily Beltran
  • Luciana Negro Demontel
  • Luopin Wang
  • Jean K Lim
  • Dylan Launder
  • Heather R Conti
  • Muthulekha Swamydas
  • Micah T McClain
  • Niki M Moutsopoulos
  • Majid Kazemian
  • Mihai G Netea
  • Vinod Kumar
  • Jörg Köhl
  • Claudia Kemper
  • Behdad Afzali
  • Michail S Lionakis

Beteiligte Einrichtungen

Abstract

Systemic candidiasis is a common, high-mortality, nosocomial fungal infection. Unexpectedly, it has emerged as a complication of anti-complement C5-targeted monoclonal antibody treatment, indicating a critical niche for C5 in antifungal immunity. We identified transcription of complement system genes as the top biological pathway induced in candidemic patients and as predictive of candidemia. Mechanistically, C5a-C5aR1 promoted fungal clearance and host survival in a mouse model of systemic candidiasis by stimulating phagocyte effector function and ERK- and AKT-dependent survival in infected tissues. C5ar1 ablation rewired macrophage metabolism downstream of mTOR, promoting their apoptosis and enhancing mortality through kidney injury. Besides hepatocyte-derived C5, local C5 produced intrinsically by phagocytes provided a key substrate for antifungal protection. Lower serum C5a concentrations or a C5 polymorphism that decreases leukocyte C5 expression correlated independently with poor patient outcomes. Thus, local, phagocyte-derived C5 production licenses phagocyte antimicrobial function and confers innate protection during systemic fungal infection.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
ISSN0092-8674
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 22.06.2023

Anmerkungen des Dekanats

Published by Elsevier Inc.

PubMed 37220746