The role of lipids in regulating macrophage antifungal immunity.

mBio

Institute of Immunology and Immunotherapy, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, United Kingdom.

Published: October 2024

Macrophages are critical components of the antifungal immune response. Disturbance in the number or function of these innate immune cells can significantly increase susceptibility to invasive fungal infections. Pathogenic fungi cause billions of infections every year and have an unmet clinical need, with many infections associated with unacceptably high mortality rates that primarily affect vulnerable patients with underlying immune defects. Lipid metabolism has been increasingly appreciated to significantly influence macrophage function, particularly of macrophages residing in lipid-rich organs, such as the brain, or macrophages specialized at clearing dead cells including alveolar macrophages in the lungs. In this review, we provide an overview of macrophage lipid metabolism, and discuss how lipid recycling and dysregulation affect key macrophage functions relevant for antifungal immunity including phagocytosis, functional polarization, and inflammasome activation. We focus on the fungal pathogen , as this is the most common cause of death from fungal infection in humans and because several lines of evidence have already linked lipid metabolism in the regulation of and macrophage interactions.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11481918PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mbio.03057-23DOI Listing

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