Whitney Rabacal, Anna Hu, Sara Khalife, Gina Kim, Karen A Norris
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Experimental Pneumocystis infection in dexamethasone immunosuppressed macaques.
To establish an experimental model of Pneumocystis jirovecii pneumonia (PJP) in the context of drug-induced immunosuppression, cohorts of macaques were chronically treated with dexamethasone and subsequently exposed to natural transmission of Pneumocystis through co-housing with other Pneumocystis colonized or infected 'seeder' macaques. Through flow cytometry, we observed that long-term dexamethasone treatment reproducibly reduced the frequency and cell numbers of CD4 T cells in the peripheral blood and bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) in both Japanese (Macaca fuscata) and rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta), reflective of a state of chronic immunosuppression. This was accompanied by a reduction in the frequency and cell number of CD20 + B cells and the absence of antibody responses against the protective Pneumocystis antigen KEX1 in the peripheral blood. Pneumocystis-specific polymerase chain reaction and histologic evidence of Pneumocystis infection in serial BAL samples demonstrated that dexamethasone induced immunosuppression rendered both Japanese and rhesus macaques susceptible to persistent Pneumocystis colonization and subsequent infection. Moreover, disease progression was associated with increased neutrophil infiltration in the lung. Insight gained from this model will aid the development of novel prevention and treatment strategies in a highly relevant model of Pneumocystis infection.
期刊介绍:
Medical Mycology is a peer-reviewed international journal that focuses on original and innovative basic and applied studies, as well as learned reviews on all aspects of medical, veterinary and environmental mycology as related to disease. The objective is to present the highest quality scientific reports from throughout the world on divergent topics. These topics include the phylogeny of fungal pathogens, epidemiology and public health mycology themes, new approaches in the diagnosis and treatment of mycoses including clinical trials and guidelines, pharmacology and antifungal susceptibilities, changes in taxonomy, description of new or unusual fungi associated with human or animal disease, immunology of fungal infections, vaccinology for prevention of fungal infections, pathogenesis and virulence, and the molecular biology of pathogenic fungi in vitro and in vivo, including genomics, transcriptomics, metabolomics, and proteomics. Case reports are no longer accepted. In addition, studies of natural products showing inhibitory activity against pathogenic fungi are not accepted without chemical characterization and identification of the compounds responsible for the inhibitory activity.