Publications by authors named "Meghan Bialt DeCelie"

Gastrointestinal fungal dysbiosis is a hallmark of several diseases marked by systemic immune activation. Whether persistent pathobiont colonization during immune alterations and impaired gut barrier function has a durable impact on host immunity is unknown. We found that elevated levels of Candida albicans immunoglobulin G (IgG) antibodies marked patients with severe COVID-19 (sCOVID-19) who had intestinal Candida overgrowth, mycobiota dysbiosis and systemic neutrophilia.

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Aberrant CD4 T cell reactivity against intestinal microorganisms is considered to drive mucosal inflammation in inflammatory bowel diseases. The disease-relevant microbial species and the corresponding microorganism-specific, pathogenic T cell phenotypes remain largely unknown. In the present study, we identified common gut commensal and food-derived yeasts, as direct activators of altered CD4 T cell reactions in patients with Crohn's disease (CD).

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Secretory immunoglobulin A (sIgA) plays an important role in gut barrier protection by shaping the resident microbiota community, restricting the growth of bacterial pathogens and enhancing host protective immunity via immunological exclusion. Here, we found that a portion of the microbiota-driven sIgA response is induced by and directed towards intestinal fungi. Analysis of the human gut mycobiota bound by sIgA revealed a preference for hyphae, a fungal morphotype associated with virulence.

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Article Synopsis
  • Antibodies help protect against viral and bacterial infections, but there are no effective vaccines or antibody treatments for fungal pathogens, which are a significant health concern.
  • Using a new approach called multiKAP, researchers examined human antibodies targeting gut fungi and found that Candida albicans is a major trigger for antifungal antibodies (IgG).
  • The production of these antifungal antibodies requires a specific immune pathway involving the CARD9 gene, and mutations in this gene can lead to reduced antibody responses in individuals suffering from invasive fungal infections like candidiasis.
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