Microglia sense fungal infections through capsular components from capillary-bound Cryptococcus neoformans via endothelial nucleotide signaling.

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作者:Feng Chenxu, Wang Ge, Wang Yixuan, Gao Xiang, Xu Zhenqi, Fang Luyao, Ma Ziyi, Zheng Suwei, Xie Yuyan, Chu Yufeng, Meng Mei, Yang Angela, Lu Miriam, Mondina Judd Denzel Garcia, Zhu Weiwei, Zhang Lisheng, Wang Linqi, Chen Zongyan, Sun Donglei
Macrophages are essential for host defense, yet how parenchyma-residing macrophages detect pathogens without direct contact remains unclear. Cryptococcus neoformans is an encapsulated fungal pathogen that infects the brain. Using in situ imaging of mouse model, we showed that brain-resident microglia vigilantly detect capillary-residing C. neoformans prior to its blood-brain barrier transmigration, but are less responsive to nonencapsulated fungi or parenchyma-injected C. neoformans. Microglia migrate to and enwrap leaky capillaries harboring fungi, leading to fungal uptake but not clearance, instead promoting fungal growth. Microglial response is triggered by released capsule components, rather than the assembled capsule. In particular, glucuronoxylomannan (GXM) plays a critical role by activating endothelial cells to release nucleotides which act on microglia P2Y12. Our findings revealed a novel paradigm by which microglia detect pathogens without direct contact, offering new insights for microglia-directed antifungal therapies.

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