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Th1-Dependent Cryptococcus-Associated Immune Reconstitution Inflammatory Syndrome Model With Brain Damage

Yee Ming Khaw, Nupur Aggarwal, William E. Barclay, Eunjoo Kang, Makoto Inoue, Mari L. Shinohara

2020Frontiers in Immunology22 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Cryptococcus-associated immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome (C-IRIS) is identified upon immune reconstitution in immunocompromised patients, who have previously contracted an infection of Cryptococcus neoformans (Cn). C-IRIS can be lethal but how the immune system triggers life-threatening outcomes in patients is still poorly understood. Here, we establish a mouse model for C-IRIS with Cn serotype A strain H99, which is highly virulent and the most intensively studied. C-IRIS in mice is induced by the adoptive transfer of CD4+ T cells in immunocompromised Rag1-deficient mice infected with a low inoculum of Cn. The mice with C-IRIS exhibit symptoms which mimic clinical presentations of C-IRIS. This C-IRIS model is Th1-dependent and shows host mortality. This model is characterized with minimal lung inflammation, but infiltration of Th1 cells in the brain. C-IRIS mice also exhibited brain swelling with resemblance to edema and upregulation of aquaporin-4, a critical protein that regulates water flux in the brain in a Th1-dependent fashion. Our C-IRIS model may be used to advance our understanding of the paradoxical inflammatory phenomenon of C-IRIS in the context of neuroinflammation.

Topics & Concepts

Immune reconstitution inflammatory syndromeImmune systemImmunologyNeuroinflammationIRIS (biosensor)InflammationCryptococcus neoformansAdoptive cell transferProinflammatory cytokineLungMedicineBiologyMicrobiologyT cellVirusViral loadComputer securityAntiretroviral therapyInternal medicineComputer scienceBiometricsFungal Infections and StudiesInfectious Diseases and TuberculosisAntifungal resistance and susceptibility
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