Immunity to fungi in the lung Review


Authors: Heung, L. J.; Wiesner, D. L.; Wang, K.; Rivera, A.; Hohl, T. M.
Review Title: Immunity to fungi in the lung
Abstract: The respiratory tree maintains sterilizing immunity against human fungal pathogens. Humans inhale ubiquitous filamentous molds and geographically restricted dimorphic fungal pathogens that form small airborne conidia. In addition, pathogenic yeasts, exemplified by encapsulated Cryptococcus species, and Pneumocystis pose significant fungal threats to the lung. Classically, fungal pneumonia occurs in immune compromised individuals, specifically in patients with HIV/AIDS, in patients with hematologic malignancies, in organ transplant recipients, and in patients treated with corticosteroids and targeted biologics that impair fungal immune surveillance in the lung. The emergence of fungal co-infections during severe influenza and COVID-19 underscores the impairment of fungus-specific host defense pathways in the lung by respiratory viruses and by medical therapies to treat viral infections. Beyond life-threatening invasive syndromes, fungal antigen exposure can exacerbate allergenic disease in the lung. In this review, we discuss emerging principles of lung-specific antifungal immunity, integrate the contributions and cooperation of lung epithelial, innate immune, and adaptive immune cells to mucosal barrier immunity, and highlight the pathogenesis of fungal-associated allergenic disease. Improved understanding of fungus-specific immunity in the respiratory tree has paved the way to develop improved diagnostic, pre-emptive, therapeutic, and vaccine approaches for fungal diseases of the lung. © 2023
Keywords: pathogenesis; review; nonhuman; disease association; infection; pneumonia; disease severity; cellular immunity; neutrophil; lung; epithelium cell; innate immunity; immunity, innate; immunity; monocyte; adaptive immunity; macrophage; lymphocyte; tissue injury; mycosis; aspergillus; fungus; fungi; t cell; lung parenchyma; cytoarchitecture; mycoses; innate; lung mycosis; cryptococcus; mucosal immunity; allergenicity; fungus immunity; histoplasma; blastomyces; humans; human; mucormycosis; covid-19; mucomycosis; mucorales; paracoccidioides; talaromyces
Journal Title: Seminars in Immunology
Volume: 66
ISSN: 1044-5323
Publisher: Academic Press Inc., Elsevier Science  
Date Published: 2023-03-01
Start Page: 101728
Language: English
DOI: 10.1016/j.smim.2023.101728
PUBMED: 36841146
PROVIDER: scopus
DOI/URL:
Notes: Review -- MSK Cancer Center Support Grant (P30 CA008748) acknowledged in PubMed and PDF -- MSK corresponding author is Tobias Hohl -- Source: Scopus
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  1. Tobias Martin Hohl
    105 Hohl