After having seen two fires in our makerspace lasers with in the last two months, I don't think it's prudent to connect it to a dust collector. (that might be connected to other WWing tools)
1st case involved cutting small pieces within letters in Plexi which burst into flames and caused 3000CDN$ damage to our laser. If a high volume fan was going into a dust collector filled with dust, well it could have sucked up a burning piece of plixi, and injected it into sawdust, with a large amount of blowing air...., into a canister likely hidden from view!. Some folks would consider that a recipe for disaster.
2nd case was a rubberized material that an engineer had apparently " fire-tested" but it still burst into flame with the temps in the laser. No damage, just a LOT of soot all over innards of machine and optics!, but a high-volume exhaust going into a dust collector could have sucked up one of those burning pieces.
In both cases, time elapsed form happy lasering to open flame was less than a minute! I was nearby for both occasions.
We invested in a CO2 extinquisher, and installed dome mirrors over both lasers so that folks could be sitting on a desk and see the flames before they became significant
Lasers don't produce dust, so no need for dust deputy or dust collectors, both of ours are vented outside directly, and even then, the roof-top grill typically gets cleaned twice yearly as our cold CDN winters lead to condensation and percipitation of the creosote on the outside grill!