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cPLA2, eicosanoids, and responses to fungal pathogens

$285,055P01FY2015HLNIH

National Jewish Health, Denver CO

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Abstract

The objectives of Project 1 are to study the mechanisms of activation of Group IVA cytosolic phospholipase A{2} (cPLA{2}a) in resident peritoneal and alveolar macrophages by the opportunistic fungal pathogens Candida albicans and Aspergillus fumigatus, and to determine the role of eicosanoids in regulating immune responses to fungal infection in vivo. Fungi activate cPLA{2}a in macrophages that promotes arachidonic acid release and production of prostaglandins and leukotrienes. Eicosanoids regulate acute inflammation and immune responses such as vascular permeability, emigration and function of leukocytes, production of cytokines, and lymphocyte differentiation. There has been considerable interest in elucidating mechanisms regulating host responses to fungal infection, however, the mechanisms regulating cPLA{2}a activation by C. albicans and A. fumigatus and the role of lipid mediators in regulating fungal infection are poorly understood. We hypothesize that C. albicans and A. fumigatus engage C-type lectin receptors (dectin-1 and dectin-2) and MyD88-dependent pathways to activate cPLA{2}a and eicosanoid production. A comparison of resident macrophages from the peritoneal cavity and from the lung, and fungal infection at these distinct sites, will provide insight into how these unique tissue environments influence responses to fungal infection. The Specific Aims are: (1) to identify the pattern recognition receptors engaged by C. albicans and (2) the mechanisms for cPLA{2}a activation and eicosanoid production in peritoneal macrophages; (3) to elucidate how eicosanoids modulate responses of peritoneal macrophages to C. albicans in vitro and regulate inflammation in C. albicans peritonitis in vivo; and (4) to determine mechanisms of cPLA{2}a activation and eicosanoid production by C. albicans and A. fumigatus in mouse and human alveolar macrophages, and the role of cPLA{2}a in regulating host responses to A. fumigatus lung infection. We hypothesize that eicosanoids play a protective role in fungal host defense by modulating cell recruitment and the balance of cytokine production. Once infection is contained, cPLA{2}a activation and eicosanoid production also protect the lung from excess inflammation by enhancing clearance of apoptotic neutrophils through the novel lipid mediator lysophosphatidylserine (Project 2). However, environmental insults such as ozone (Project 3) can lead to production of novel lipid mediators that interfere with these protective pathways. We will define how lipid mediators regulate host defense, the amplitude of inflammation and its resolution.

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