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S100A8 and S100A9 are cytosolic alarmins with autocrine functions that facilitate neutrophil recruitment. Rapid, transient gasdermin-D pore formation is now shown to mediate secretion of these proteins in response to E-selectin without driving pyroptosis.
Neutrophils can release S100A8/S100A9 as an alarmin via gasdermin D pores. Here, the authors untangle the regulatory mechanisms driving this pathway and show that active repair processes make these pores transient, which can prevent the usual lytic cell death.
Severe COVID-19 is marked by excessive inflammation that can persist after infection. The commensal yeast Candida albicans is now implicated in the acute and chronic immunopathology of COVID-19.
Iliev et al. report that increased Candida albicans accumulation in the mycobiota of patients with severe COVID-19 might be a contributing factor to the immunopathology of severe COVID-19 and have long-lasting effects on the hematopoietic stem cell compartment.
Einav and colleagues characterize peripheral immune blood cells from pediatric patients with severe natural dengue infections. Their findings suggest that disease progression is associated with an inflammatory phenotype accompanied by impaired interferon response, defective antigen presentation and regulation of effector lymphocyte responses.
Hogan et al. identify a co-immunodominant influenza peptide presented in mice by MHC-E, a nonclassical class I molecule. Notably, the peptide derives from a 16-residue alternative reading frame translated by leaky ribosome scanning of the M1 mRNA and is recognized by conventional CD8+ T cells.
Liu and colleagues find differential effects of microglial apoE isoforms on brain function and microglial responses. ApoE3 enhances microglial responses, promoting brain function and reducing amyloid deposition and associated neurotoxicity, while the Alzheimer’s disease-associated apoE4 results in lipid droplet accumulation and impaired microglial responses, which are critical for limiting the development of amyloid pathology.
A trimodal single-cell assay reveals a previously unknown T cell subset and cellular state differences between children and older adults that might contribute to age-specific immunity.
Using TEA-seq, Thomson et al. detail transcriptional and epigenetic alterations in the T cell compartment between healthy children and older adults, leading to the discovery of a novel pediatric CD8αα+ population poised for rapid effector responses.
Immune checkpoint inhibitors provide beneficial anti-tumor immunity but risk immune-related adverse events occurring in normal tissues. Notably, selective deletion of PGLYRP1, a protein expressed by several immune cells, protects against tumor cell growth and autoimmunity.
Genetic and environmental diversity are major drivers of macrophage transcriptional responses, but the mechanisms that underlie the relative contributions of gene-by-environment interactions to transcriptional responses of tissue macrophages are unclear. We defined the relative effect of cis regulation, cell-autonomous trans regulation, and non-cell-autonomous trans regulation of Kupffer cell gene expression.
Eisenlohr and colleagues identify a novel influenza A virus peptide that elicits a robust CD8+ T cell response and is restricted by the nonclassical Qa-1 class I molecule.
Here, the authors show that deletion of Pglyrp1 promotes antitumor immunity owing to its inhibitory function in CD8+ T cells and that targeting it can inhibit development of autoimmune neuroinflammation. These findings indicate that PGLYRP1 might be a target for immunotherapy.