Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
A CARD9 deficiency mouse model recapitulates human chronic CNS candidiasis identifying defective monocytic cell responses in immunopathogenesis.
- Journal:
- JCI insight
- Year:
- 2025
- Authors:
- Landekic, Marija et al.
- Affiliation:
- Department of Microbiology & Immunology · Canada
- Species:
- rodent
Abstract
Human Caspase Recruitment Domain Containing Protein 9 (CARD9) deficiency predisposes to invasive fungal disease, particularly by Candida spp. CARD9 deficiency causes chronic central nervous system (CNS) candidiasis. Currently, no animal model recapitulates the chronicity of disease, precluding a better understanding of immunopathogenesis. We established a knock-in mouse homozygous for the recurring p.Y91H mutation (Y91HKI) and, in parallel to Card9-/- mice, titrated the intravenous fungal inoculum to the CARD9 genotype to develop a model of chronic invasive candidiasis. Strikingly, CARD9-deficient mice had predominantly CNS involvement, with neurological symptoms appearing late during infection and progressive brain fungal burden in the absence of fulminant sepsis, reflecting the human syndrome. Mononuclear cell aggregation at fungal lesions in the brain correlated with increased MHCII+Ly6C+ monocyte numbers at day 1 after infection in WT and Y91HKI mice, but not in Card9-/- mice. At day 4 after infection, neutrophils and additional Ly6C+ monocytes were recruited to the CARD9-deficient brain. As in humans, Y91HKI mutant mice demonstrated cerebral multinucleated giant cells and granulomata. Subtle immunologic differences between the hypomorphic (p.Y91H) and null mice were noted, perhaps explaining some of the variability seen in humans. Our work established a disease-recapitulating animal model to specifically decipher chronic CNS candidiasis due to CARD9 deficiency.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40424070/