- Deng, Zihou;
- Ma, Shixin;
- Zhou, Hao;
- Zang, Aiping;
- Fang, Yiyuan;
- Li, Tiantian;
- Shi, Huanjing;
- Liu, Mei;
- Du, Min;
- Taylor, Patricia;
- Zhu, Helen;
- Chen, Jiangye;
- Meng, Guangxun;
- Li, Fubin;
- Chen, Changbin;
- Zhang, Yan;
- Jia, Xin-Ming;
- Lin, Xin;
- Zhang, Xiaoming;
- Li, Xiaoxia;
- Feng, Gen-Sheng;
- Xiao, Hui;
- Pearlman, Eric
Fungal infection stimulates the canonical C-type lectin receptor (CLR) signaling pathway via activation of the tyrosine kinase Syk. Here we identify a crucial role for the tyrosine phosphatase SHP-2 in mediating CLR-induced activation of Syk. Ablation of the gene encoding SHP-2 (Ptpn11; called Shp-2 here) in dendritic cells (DCs) and macrophages impaired Syk-mediated signaling and abrogated the expression of genes encoding pro-inflammatory molecules following fungal stimulation. Mechanistically, SHP-2 operated as a scaffold, facilitating the recruitment of Syk to the CLR dectin-1 or the adaptor FcRγ, through its N-SH2 domain and a previously unrecognized carboxy-terminal immunoreceptor tyrosine-based activation motif (ITAM). We found that DC-derived SHP-2 was crucial for the induction of interleukin 1β (IL-1β), IL-6 and IL-23 and anti-fungal responses of the TH17 subset of helper T cells in controlling infection with Candida albicans. Together our data reveal a mechanism by which SHP-2 mediates the activation of Syk in response to fungal infection.