Th17 cells and IL-17 receptor signaling are essential for mucosal host defense against oral candidiasis

Heather R. Conti(University of Dental Medicine), Fang Shen(University of Dental Medicine), Namrata Nayyar(University of Dental Medicine), Eileen Stocum(University of Dental Medicine), Jianing N. Sun(University of Dental Medicine), Matthew J. Lindemann(University of Dental Medicine), Allen W. Ho(University of Dental Medicine), Justine Hoda Hai(University of Dental Medicine), Jeffrey Yu(University of Dental Medicine), Ji Won Jung(University of Dental Medicine), Scott G. Filler(University of California, Los Angeles), Patricia A. Masso‐Welch(University of Dental Medicine), Mira Edgerton(University of Dental Medicine), Sarah L. Gaffen(University of Pittsburgh)
The Journal of Experimental Medicine
February 9, 2009
Cited by 999Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

The commensal fungus Candida albicans causes oropharyngeal candidiasis (OPC; thrush) in settings of immunodeficiency. Although disseminated, vaginal, and oral candidiasis are all caused by C. albicans species, host defense against C. albicans varies by anatomical location. T helper 1 (Th1) cells have long been implicated in defense against candidiasis, whereas the role of Th17 cells remains controversial. IL-17 mediates inflammatory pathology in a gastric model of mucosal candidiasis, but is host protective in disseminated disease. Here, we directly compared Th1 and Th17 function in a model of OPC. Th17-deficient (IL-23p19(-/-)) and IL-17R-deficient (IL-17RA(-/-)) mice experienced severe OPC, whereas Th1-deficient (IL-12p35(-/-)) mice showed low fungal burdens and no overt disease. Neutrophil recruitment was impaired in IL-23p19(-/-) and IL-17RA(-/-), but not IL-12(-/-), mice, and TCR-alphabeta cells were more important than TCR-gammadelta cells. Surprisingly, mice deficient in the Th17 cytokine IL-22 were only mildly susceptible to OPC, indicating that IL-17 rather than IL-22 is vital in defense against oral candidiasis. Gene profiling of oral mucosal tissue showed strong induction of Th17 signature genes, including CXC chemokines and beta defensin-3. Saliva from Th17-deficient, but not Th1-deficient, mice exhibited reduced candidacidal activity. Thus, the Th17 lineage, acting largely through IL-17, confers the dominant response to oral candidiasis through neutrophils and antimicrobial factors.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis