Colonic Engyodontium fungus triggers neutrophil antimicrobial activity to suppress Lactobacillus johnsonii–derived glutamic acid–maintained Tregs
Summary
Isolating commensal fungi from mouse intestines has been challenging, limiting our understanding of their role in intestinal immune homeostasis and diseases. Using an Fc fusion protein of the C-type lectin receptor Dectin-2, we successfully purified the commensal Ascomycota fungus Engyodontium sp. from mouse feces. Engyodontium enhances the antimicrobial activity of colonic neutrophils via the CARD9 pathway and exac…
Isolating commensal fungi from mouse intestines has been challenging, limiting our understanding of their role in intestinal immune homeostasis and diseases. Using an Fc fusion protein of the C-type lectin receptor Dectin-2, we successfully purified the commensal Ascomycota fungus Engyodontium sp. from mouse feces. Engyodontium enhances the antimicrobial activity of colonic neutrophils via the CARD9 pathway and exacerbates colitis by impairing the colonization of intestinal Lactobacillus johnsonii WXY strain. L. johnsonii produces high levels of l-glutamic acid by expressing the glutaminase-encoding gene glsA to facilitate Treg expansion via enhancing IL-2 receptor signaling. Patients with Crohn disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis harbored increased Engyodontium and decreased L. johnsonii abundance. Engyodontium directly induced calprotectin in human colonic neutrophils, and patients with CD had lower levels of l-glutamic acid, which also promoted human Treg expansion. These findings highlight the Engyodontium-calprotectin axis against the Lactobacillus-glutamate-Treg cascade to aggravate colitis, suggesting commensal Engyodontium-triggered signaling as a therapeutic target for mucosal inflammatory diseases.