AI Article Synopsis

  • Chitin is a natural substance found in many living things, and it can trigger immune responses in mammals.
  • FIBCD1 is a special protein in human lungs that connects with chitin and affects how the lungs react to certain fungi, like A. fumigatus.
  • In this study, scientists looked at how chitin and fungal particles influence lung responses, finding that FIBCD1 changes the levels of signal molecules in the lungs depending on the size of the chitin.

Article Abstract

Chitin, a polysaccharide, is ubiquitously found in nature and has been known to be an active immunogen in mammals, and interacts with Toll-like, mannose and glucan receptors, to induce cytokine and chemokine secretions. FIBCD1 is a tetrameric type II transmembrane endocytic vertebrate receptor that binds chitin, is found in human lung epithelium and modulates lung epithelial inflammatory responses to A. fumigatus cell wall polysaccharides. We previously reported the detrimental role of FIBCD1 in a murine model of pulmonary invasive aspergillosis. However, the effect that chitin and chitin-containing A. fumigatus conidia exerts on lung epithelium following exposure through FIBCD1 is not yet fully explored. Using both in vitro and in vivo strategies, we examined how lung and lung epithelial gene expression are modified after exposure to fungal conidia or chitin fragments in the presence or absence of FIBCD1. FIBCD1 expression was associated with a decrease in inflammatory cytokines with increasing size of chitin (dimer-oligomer). Thus, our results demonstrate that FIBCD1 expression modulates cytokine and chemokine expression in response to A. fumigatus conidia that is modified by the presence of chitin particles.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9994688PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0282347PLOS

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