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Potent induction of trained immunity by β-glucans.

Frontiers in immunology

Authors: Patricia Vuscan, Brenda Kischkel, Aikaterini Hatzioannou, Efrosyni Markaki, Andrei Sarlea, Maria Tintoré, Jordi Cuñé, Panayotis Verginis, Carlos de Lecea, Triantafyllos Chavakis, Leo A B Joosten, Mihai G Netea

cell wall component β-glucan has been extensively studied for its ability to induce epigenetic and functional reprogramming of innate immune cells, a process termed . We show that a high-complexity blend of two individual β-glucans from possesses strong bioactivity, resulting in an enhanced trained innate immune response by human primary monocytes. The training required the Dectin-1/CR3, TLR4, and MMR receptors, as well as the Raf-1, Syk, and PI3K downstream signaling molecules. By activating multiple receptors and downstream signaling pathways, the components of this β-glucan preparation are able to act synergistically, causing a robust secondary response upon an unrelated challenge. In murine models of melanoma and bladder cell carcinoma, pre-treatment of mice with the β-glucan preparation led to a significant reduction in tumor growth. These insights may aid in the development of future therapies based on β-glucan structures that induce an effective trained immunity response.

Copyright © 2024 Vuscan, Kischkel, Hatzioannou, Markaki, Sarlea, Tintoré, Cuñé, Verginis, de Lecea, Chavakis, Joosten and Netea.

PMID: 38415247

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