PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

How an immune cell receptor dampens the fight against fungal infection

Researchers clarify a previously underexplored immunoregulatory mechanism in aspergillosis, paving the way for improved clinical management

2025-09-11
(Press-News.org)

People are exposed to millions of fungal spores every day, even potentially harmful ones like those from Aspergillus fumigatus. For most individuals, this constant exposure is harmless, as the immune system efficiently clears the spores without causing illness. However, for a growing number of people with weakened immune systems due to cancer, organ transplants, or chronic diseases, Aspergillus spores can lead to life-threatening infections known as aspergillosis. Thus, understanding the specific immune mechanisms that fight fungal infections is essential for developing therapies and improving outcomes for those affected.

Scientists have long studied a family of sensor proteins called C-type lectin receptors (CLRs), which are crucial for detecting and eliminating pathogens. Most CLRs act like a car’s gas pedal, initiating powerful immune responses to attack invading microbes. However, one specific CLR, the dendritic cell immunoreceptor (Dcir), is a known immunoregulator that instead acts like a brake, dampening immune responses. While its role in limiting inflammation and autoimmunity is well-documented, its precise function during fungal infections remains unclear.

In a recent study, a research team led by Associate Professor Shinobu Saijo and Assistant Professor Fabio Seiti Yamada Yoshikawa of the Medical Mycology Research Center at Chiba University, Japan, tackled this knowledge gap. Using mouse models, the team investigated how Dcir influences the host response to Aspergillus fumigatus, focusing on how it affects a key immune cell type. The study was published in Volume 16 of the journal Frontiers in Immunology on August 4, 2025.

Initial experiments revealed that mice lacking Dcir (or ‘Dcir-knockout’) were significantly better at clearing the fungal infection from their lungs and spleen compared to wild-type mice. To understand why the absence of this receptor improved the immune response, the team focused on neutrophils, which are the primary immune cells responsible for combating this type of infection. They discovered that the protective effect of Dcir deficiency was entirely dependent on neutrophils, as depleting these cells in Dcir-knockout mice eliminated the enhanced fungal clearance they had previously observed.

The researchers then moved on to in vitro experiments, for which they isolated neutrophils from the Dcir-knockout mice. “Neutrophils eliminate pathogens via phagocytosis, programmed cell death, oxidative stress, and degranulation,” explains Dr. Fabio Seiti Yamada Yoshikawa. “We sought to pinpoint the exact effector mechanism through which Dcir regulates fungicidal activity against A. fumigatus.” The team confirmed that these neutrophils were more effective at killing fungal hyphae—the filamentous structures that make up the main body of the fungus—through degranulation. This is a powerful process in which neutrophils release their internal store of enzymes, destroying pathogens too large to be engulfed. Neutrophils from Dcir-deficient mice exhibited significantly higher degranulation activity, which the researchers linked to increased intracellular calcium mobilization and the activation of a specific signaling protein called PLCγ2. Conversely, when they blocked the degranulation process with a drug, the protective effect of Dcir deficiency disappeared, both in vitro and in the mouse model.

By acting as a negative regulator of neutrophil degranulation, Dcir essentially puts a brake on the immune system, limiting its effectiveness against A. fumigatus. Overall, these findings broaden our understanding of CLR functions in host defense, highlighting an additional level of complexity in host–fungi interactions that could be leveraged in clinical practice. “The identification of Dcir as a receptor involved in the host defense to Aspergillus fumigatus suggests that it can be a potential target for pharmacological interventions, helping in the treatment of patients affected by this infection,” notes Dr. Saijo. “Our work thus opens new avenues of investigation that can help improve the current understanding of aspergillosis and its management.”

Further research will focus on whether genetic variations in the Dcir gene are associated with the severity of aspergillosis in humans and on identifying the specific molecules on Aspergillus that Dcir recognizes. With any luck, these efforts will ultimately lead to better options for those at higher risk of fungal infection. 

To see more news from Chiba University, click here. 

 

About Associate Professor Shinobu Saijo from Chiba University, Japan
Dr. Shinobu Saijo is an Associate Professor at the Division of Molecular Immunology, Medical Mycology Research Center at Chiba University, Japan. Her research focuses on molecular immunology, especially cytokines at the interface of health and disease. She has over 70 scientific publications on these topics.

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

SeoulTech researchers uncover high PAHs in common foods

2025-09-11
In today’s world, people are increasingly prioritizing their health and well-being, with daily exercises and calorie-tracking apps becoming the new norm. People are therefore interested in incorporating highly nutritious food items such as fruits and vegetables into their diet plans. However, these foods—owing to contamination as well as due to certain cooking methods such as heating, smoking, grilling, roasting, and frying—may contain polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) (hydrophobic organic compounds comprising ...

Precision in the pancreas: New test transforms hereditary pancreatitis diagnosis and care

2025-09-11
ROCHESTER, Minnesota — A new genetic test developed at Mayo Clinic is redefining how clinicians diagnose and manage hereditary pancreatitis. Pancreatitis, inflammation of the pancreas, is a complex condition that can lead to chronic pain, repeated hospitalizations and serious complications including diabetes, kidney failure and pancreatic cancer.  The new hereditary pancreatitis gene panel available through Mayo Clinic Laboratories (Mayo ID: PANGP) resulted from collaboration ...

Peer-reviewed study validates Mentavi’s online ADHD diagnostic evaluation in the Journal of Clinical Psychiatry

2025-09-11
Mentavi Health announced that its landmark, real-world validation study of the Mentavi Diagnostic Evaluation has been published in the peer-reviewed Journal of Clinical Psychiatry (JCP), a widely read and respected journal. The open-access article demonstrates that Mentavi’s asynchronous, online evaluation is as accurate as a traditional face-to-face clinical interview in the diagnosis of attention-deficit / hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) in adults and provides the first peer-reviewed evidence base for a fully digital ...

Machine embroidery encodes skin-like tension lines in textiles, enabling mass-customizable wearables

2025-09-11
A zigzag stitch enables fabric to stretch until the thread is straight. University of Tartu researchers report in Advanced Materials that thread packing can encode fabric stretchability, leading the way to tailoring wearables at industrial scale. As every body is unique, achieving a perfect dynamic fit of garments has to date relied on artisanal tailoring that cannot scale. Machine embroidery can place load-bearing thread in arbitrary patterns, but has been applied almost exclusively for visual appeal, such as logos and decorations. Embroidery machines ...

Customized gene-editing technology shows potential to treat lethal pediatric disease

2025-09-11
Multisystemic smooth muscle dysfunction syndrome (MSMDS) is a rare condition associated with stroke, aortic dissection (tearing) and death in childhood. Currently, there is no effective treatment or cure for MSMDS. A single error in the genetic code of the ACTA2 gene, which encodes the smooth muscle actin protein, is the most common cause of MSMDS. To directly target this mutation, researchers from Mass General Brigham engineered a bespoke CRISPR-Cas9 gene-editing enzyme to develop a potential therapy for ...

Johns Hopkins researchers discover new methods for making smaller microchips

2025-09-11
Johns Hopkins researchers have discovered new materials and a new process that could advance the ever-escalating quest to make smaller, faster and affordable microchips used across modern electronics—in everything from cellphones to cars, appliances to airplanes. The team of scientists has discovered how to create circuits that are so small they’re invisible to the naked eye using a process that is both precise and economical for manufacturing.  The findings are published today in the journal Nature Chemical Engineering.  “Companies have their roadmaps ...

Durham University scientists play key role in testing superconducting materials for world’s largest fusion energy project

2025-09-11
-With images-   Durham University scientists have completed one of the largest quality verification programmes ever carried out on superconducting materials, helping to ensure the success of the world’s biggest fusion energy experiment ITER.   Their findings, published in Superconductor Science and Technology, shed light not only on the quality of the wires themselves but also on how to best test them, providing crucial knowledge for scientists to make fusion energy a reality.   Fusion (the process that powers the Sun) has long been described as the holy grail of clean energy. It offers the promise of a virtually limitless power source with no carbon emissions ...

Drug-resistant fungus Candidozyma auris confirmed to spread rapidly in European hospitals: ECDC calls for urgent action

2025-09-11
The latest survey from the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC), the fourth of its kind, confirms that Candidozyma auris (formerly Candida auris) continues to spread quickly across European hospitals, posing a serious threat to patients and healthcare systems. Case numbers are rising, outbreaks are growing in scale, and several countries report ongoing local transmission. The findings highlight the importance of early detection and control of transmission to avoid widespread rapid dissemination. Candidozyma auris (C. auris) is a ...

New evidence of long-distance travelers in Seddin during the Bronze Age

2025-09-11
Recent research suggests that many of the Bronze Age people buried in Seddin, Germany, were not locals but came from outside the region. While archaeologists had previously uncovered artefacts from other parts of Europe around Seddin, this new study reveals that people themselves travelled and settled in Seddin. This is the first bioarchaeological investigation on human skeletal remains from the Seddin area. While studying archaeological artefacts can reveal trade and exchange between different areas, it cannot determine whether this was accompanied by human travel. This new study sheds light on how people ...

Newly dated 85-million-year-old dino eggs could improve understanding of Cretaceous climate

2025-09-11
In the Cretaceous period, Earth was plagued by widespread volcanic activity, oceanic oxygen depletion events, and mass extinctions. Fossils from that era remain and continue to give scientists clues as to what the climate may have looked like in different regions. Now, researchers in China have examined some of them: dinosaur eggs found at the Qinglongshan site in the Yunyang Basin in central China. This is the first time that dinosaur eggs have been dated using carbonate uranium-lead (U-Pb) dating. The team published their results in Frontiers in Earth Science. “We show that these dinosaur eggs were deposited roughly 85 million years ago, ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Be careful trusting TikTok for gout advice

A study by the University of Seville links the vanishing of the specific heats at absolute zero with the principle of entropy increase

Anxiety and insomnia may lower natural killer cell count, potentially repressing immune function

How parasitic, asexual plants evolve and live

Research spotlight: A subset of patients with depression could benefit from anti-inflammatory treatment

New fully digital design paves the way for scalable probabilistic computing

Membrane electrode assembly design for high-efficiency anion exchange membrane water electrolysis

U.S. debt ceiling disputes show measurable impact on global crude oil markets

Climate extremes triggered rare coral disease and mass mortality on the Great Barrier Reef

Direct observation reveals “two-in-one” roles of plasma turbulence

Humans rank between meerkats and beavers in monogamy ‘league table’

US fossil reveals early mass-burial event and ancient microbial attack

Sedative choice could improve outcomes for breathing tube patients

New superconducting thin film for quantum computer chips

Simulations reveal protein "dynamin" constricts cell membranes by loosening its grip

Nearly 1 in 5 UK emergency department patients cared for in corridors/waiting rooms

Heavy energy drink intake may pose serious stroke risk, doctors warn

Violence against women and children among top health threats: New global study reveals disease burden far larger than previously estimated

Predicting who is at risk of developing type 1 diabetes, as new drugs now available

New gene-mapping method unlocks hidden drivers of cancer

Ocean current and seabed shape influence warm water circulation under ice shelves

Call to increase funding for ‘invisible’ Deaf victim-survivors of domestic abuse

University of Maryland School of Medicine names distinguished scientist and academic leader Gerald M. Wilson, PhD, as Chair of the Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology

Receptors in mammary glands make livestock and humans inviting hosts for avian flu

Icy hot plasmas

Treating adults with autism: Maryland Clinical Center offers national blueprint for care after pediatric transition

University of Phoenix College of Doctoral Studies releases white paper on reclaiming control to build workforce resilience

NCCN Summit seeks to improve care for veterans and first responders with cancer from line-of-duty exposure

ERC Consolidator Grant for soft robotics researcher

Dual-action arts and wellbeing program transforms dementia care

[Press-News.org] How an immune cell receptor dampens the fight against fungal infection
Researchers clarify a previously underexplored immunoregulatory mechanism in aspergillosis, paving the way for improved clinical management