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Mgl2+ cDC2s coordinate fungal allergic airway type 2, but not type 17, inflammation in mice

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posted on 2025-08-19, 11:38 authored by PC Cook, SL Brown, EL Houlder, J Furlong-Silva, DP Conn, SAP Colombo, S Baker, FR Svedberg, G Howell, M Bertuzzi, L Boon, JE Konkel, CR Thornton, JE Allen, AS MacDonald
Fungal spores are abundant in the environment and a major cause of asthma. Originally characterised as a type 2 inflammatory disease, allergic airway inflammation that underpins asthma can also involve type 17 inflammation, which can exacerbate disease causing failure of treatments tailored to inhibit type 2 factors. However, the mechanisms that determine the host response to fungi, which can trigger both type 2 and type 17 inflammation in allergic airway disease, remain unclear. Here we find that CD11c+ DCs and CD4+ T cells are essential for development of both type 2 and type 17 airway inflammation in mice repeatedly exposed to inhaled spores. Single cell RNA-sequencing with further multi-parameter cytometry shows that allergic inflammation dramatically alters the proportion of numerous DC clusters in the lung, but that only two of these (Mgl2+ cDC2s and CCR7+ DCs) migrate to the dLNs. Targeted removal of several DC subsets shows that Mgl2+ cDC2 depletion reduces type 2, but not type 17, fungal allergic airway inflammation. These data highlight distinct DC subsets as potential therapeutic targets for the treatment of pulmonary fungal disease.

Funding

106898/A/15/Z

218550/Z/19/Z

Academy of Medical Sciences

BB/P504543/1

Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC)

GSK

Lydia Becker Institute

MR/N006364/2

MR/P501955/2

MR/V011235/1

MR/V033417/1

MR/W018748/1

Medical Research Council (MRC)

NIHR203320

National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR)

SBF002/1076

University of Exeter

University of Manchester

Wellcome Trust

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Rights

© The Author(s) 2025. Open Access This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons licence, and indicate if changes were made.

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  • Yes

Submission date

2024-01-02

Notes

This is the final version. Available on open access from Nature Research via the DOI in this record. Data availability: The scRNA-seq data generated in this study have been deposited on the ArrayExpress database under accession code E-MTAB-13740. All other data are available in the article and its Supplementary files or from the corresponding author upon request. Source data are provided with this paper.

Journal

Nature Communications

Publisher

Nature Research

Place published

England

Version

  • Version of Record

Language

en

FCD date

2025-06-12T08:11:45Z

FOA date

2025-06-12T09:19:29Z

Citation

Vol. 16, article 928

Department

  • Clinical and Biomedical Sciences

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