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1.
The first barrier against infection by Candida albicans involves fungal recognition and destruction by phagocytic cells of the innate immune system. It is well established that interactions between different phagocyte receptors and components of the fungal cell wall trigger phagocytosis and subsequent immune responses, but the fungal ligands mediating the initial stage of recognition have not been identified. Here, we describe a novel assay for fungal recognition and uptake by macrophages which monitors this early recognition step independently of other downstream events of phagocytosis. To analyze infection in live macrophages, we validated the neutrality of a codon-optimized red fluorescent protein (yEmRFP) biomarker in C. albicans; growth, hyphal formation, and virulence in infected mice and macrophages were unaffected by yEmRFP production. This permitted a new approach for studying phagocytosis by carrying out competition assays between red and green fluorescent yeast cells to measure the efficiency of yeast uptake by murine macrophages as a function of dimorphism or cell wall defects. These competition experiments demonstrate that, given a choice, macrophages display strong preferences for phagocytosis based on genus, species, and morphology. Candida glabrata and Saccharomyces cerevisiae are taken up by J774 macrophage cells more rapidly than C. albicans, and C. albicans yeast cells are favored over hyphal cells. Significantly, these preferences are mannan dependent. Mutations that affect mannan, but not those that affect glucan or chitin, reduce the uptake of yeast challenged with wild-type competitors by both J774 and primary murine macrophages. These results suggest that mannose side chains or mannosylated proteins are the ligands recognized by murine macrophages prior to fungal uptake.Candida albicans is an opportunistic fungus that normally resides in the human gut (26) and can cause mucosal infections. When host immune defenses are compromised or when anatomical breaches permit extreme fungal burdens, systemic and often lethal fungal colonization throughout the body can occur. In hospital-acquired bloodstream infections, the rate of mortality, hospital cost, and length of stay associated with disseminated candidiasis now outrank those associated with bacterial infections (37, 43). The most effective host barrier that limits Candida infections is microbial destruction by phagocytic cells of the innate immune system. In a healthy host, phagocytes—macrophages, neutrophils, and dendritic cells—recognize, ingest, and destroy the invading yeast by phagocytosis.The first step of a fungal infection requires the recognition of yeast by phagocytes. Despite the medical importance of this reaction, it remains poorly understood. As the interface between the yeast and its host, the fungal cell wall is crucial for recognition. The wall is a complex structure consisting of an elastic network of polysaccharides (glucans and chitin) that surrounds the plasma membrane and that in most yeast and fungi contains many different heavily mannosylated proteins (mannan) anchored to the wall in various ways (9, 27,29). Three distinct layers that correspond to these three components can be seen by electron microscopy. The innermost layer is enriched with a small amount of chitin, the outermost layer consists of mannan, and in between these layers are flexible fibrils of β1,3-glucan. Another glucan (β1,6 linked) is relatively minor in amount but is important for maintaining wall structure because it cross-links β1,3-glucan to wall proteins and to chitin (24, 30). Yeast survival relies on the integrity of the cell wall because it shields the yeast from physical stress and osmotic shock. The wall also maintains cell shape, which is a precondition for growth and morphogenesis. The rapid switch between the yeast and hyphal forms that is essential for C. albicans virulence underscores the plasticity of the wall, whose composition, thickness, and structure vary tremendously in response to changes in the environment.Many phagocytic receptors implicated in fungal recognition have been identified. The interactions between these receptors and fungal wall components activate an array of host defense signaling pathways that promote actin cytoskeletal rearrangements and the membrane remodeling required for phagocytosis, production of toxic metabolites and hydrolytic enzymes within the phagosome that destroy the ingested yeast, and secretion of cytokines that are pro- or anti-inflammatory (for a review, see references 18, 31, and 36). These receptors are members of the C-type lectin receptor and Toll-like receptor families and include proteins that can recognize mannose, glucan, and, possibly, chitin or, possibly, multiligand combinations of these carbohydrates (for reviews, see references 22 and 49). Despite a wealth of information about the signaling cascades elicited by these host receptors, the identity of the fungal cell wall ligands that mediate the initial recognition event during host-fungal interactions remains unclear, in large part because good model systems for studying host-fungal interactions in the context of the live infective environment have been unavailable. Most current assays of fungal recognition rely on indirect readouts, for instance, virulence or cytokine production, which cannot distinguish the initial step of fungal recognition from other downstream events of phagocytosis. In addition, different experimental systems for studying fungal phagocytosis use different cell types that may display unique interactions with C. albicans and vice versa. Thus, there are conflicts in the literature about the contributions of fungal cell wall components to host recognition and phagocytosis.Here, we make use of a novel assay to help clarify discrepancies that currently exist in this field. We developed a biologically neutral red fungal fluorescent biomarker that can be stably introduced into most yeast and fungi to monitor C. albicans-host interactions during infection in live cells or animals. This permitted development of quantitative competition assays to measure uptake by macrophages of red fluorescent protein (RFP)- or green fluorescent protein (GFP)-labeled cells as a single isolated event within the complex process of phagocytosis in live cells. We apply this system to address two fundamental questions regarding fungal recognition by murine macrophages. First, do these macrophages display a preference toward yeast forms versus filamentous fungal forms, and second, how do the various fungal cell wall components contribute to this preference during the initial stage of fungal recognition? We demonstrate that, given a choice, J774 macrophages recognize and ingest yeast cells far more rapidly and efficiently than hyphal cells. Importantly, competitive fungal uptake by murine macrophages, both immortalized cell lines and primary cells, is markedly inhibited by reduction of cell wall mannan but not glucan or chitin. This points to a critical role for mannose side chains or mannosylated proteins as key fungal recognition ligands.  相似文献   

2.
The innate immune system differentially recognizes Candida albicans yeast and hyphae. It is not clear how the innate immune system effectively discriminates between yeast and hyphal forms of C. albicans. Glucans are major components of the fungal cell wall and key fungal pathogen-associated molecular patterns. C. albicans yeast glucan has been characterized; however, little is known about glucan structure in C. albicans hyphae. Using an extraction procedure that minimizes degradation of the native structure, we extracted glucans from C. albicans hyphal cell walls. 1H NMR data analysis revealed that, when compared with reference (1→3,1→6) β-linked glucans and C. albicans yeast glucan, hyphal glucan has a unique cyclical or “closed chain” structure that is not found in yeast glucan. GC/MS analyses showed a high abundance of 3- and 6-linked glucose units when compared with yeast β-glucan. In addition to the expected (1→3), (1→6), and 3,6 linkages, we also identified a 2,3 linkage that has not been reported previously in C. albicans. Hyphal glucan induced robust immune responses in human peripheral blood mononuclear cells and macrophages via a Dectin-1-dependent mechanism. In contrast, C. albicans yeast glucan was a much less potent stimulus. We also demonstrated the capacity of C. albicans hyphal glucan, but not yeast glucan, to induce IL-1β processing and secretion. This finding provides important evidence for understanding the immune discrimination between colonization and invasion at the mucosal level. When taken together, these data provide a structural basis for differential innate immune recognition of C. albicans yeast versus hyphae.  相似文献   

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C. albicans is one of the most common fungal pathogen of humans, causing local and superficial mucosal infections in immunocompromised individuals. Given that the key structure mediating host-C. albicans interactions is the fungal cell wall, we aimed to identify features of the cell wall inducing epithelial responses and be associated with fungal pathogenesis. We demonstrate here the importance of cell wall protein glycosylation in epithelial immune activation with a predominant role for the highly branched N-glycosylation residues. Moreover, these glycan moieties induce growth arrest and apoptosis of epithelial cells. Using an in vitro model of oral candidosis we demonstrate, that apoptosis induction by C. albicans wild-type occurs in early stage of infection and strongly depends on intact cell wall protein glycosylation. These novel findings demonstrate that glycosylation of the C. albicans cell wall proteins appears essential for modulation of epithelial immunity and apoptosis induction, both of which may promote fungal pathogenesis in vivo.  相似文献   

5.
Fusarium oxysporum is an important plant pathogen and an opportunistic pathogen of humans. Here we investigated phagocytosis of F. oxysporum by J774.1 murine cell line macrophages using live cell video microscopy. Macrophages avidly migrated towards F. oxysporum germlings and were rapidly engulfed after cell-cell contact was established. F. oxysporum germlings continued hyphal growth after engulfment by macrophages, leading to associated macrophage lysis and escape. Macrophage killing depended on the multiplicity of infection. After engulfment, F. oxysporum inhibited macrophages from completing mitosis, resulting in large daughter cells fused together by means of a F. oxysporum hypha. These results shed new light on the initial stages of Fusarium infection and the innate immune response of the mammalian host.  相似文献   

6.
Phagocytic clearance of fungal pathogens, and microorganisms more generally, may be considered to consist of four distinct stages: (i) migration of phagocytes to the site where pathogens are located; (ii) recognition of pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMPs) through pattern recognition receptors (PRRs); (iii) engulfment of microorganisms bound to the phagocyte cell membrane, and (iv) processing of engulfed cells within maturing phagosomes and digestion of the ingested particle. Studies that assess phagocytosis in its entirety are informative1, 2, 3, 4, 5 but are limited in that they do not normally break the process down into migration, engulfment and phagosome maturation, which may be affected differentially. Furthermore, such studies assess uptake as a single event, rather than as a continuous dynamic process. We have recently developed advanced live-cell imaging technologies, and have combined these with genetic functional analysis of both pathogen and host cells to create a cross-disciplinary platform for the analysis of innate immune cell function and fungal pathogenesis. These studies have revealed novel aspects of phagocytosis that could only be observed using systematic temporal analysis of the molecular and cellular interactions between human phagocytes and fungal pathogens and infectious microorganisms more generally. For example, we have begun to define the following: (a) the components of the cell surface required for each stage of the process of recognition, engulfment and killing of fungal cells1, 6, 7, 8; (b) how surface geometry influences the efficiency of macrophage uptake and killing of yeast and hyphal cells7; and (c) how engulfment leads to alteration of the cell cycle and behavior of macrophages 9, 10.In contrast to single time point snapshots, live-cell video microscopy enables a wide variety of host cells and pathogens to be studied as continuous sequences over lengthy time periods, providing spatial and temporal information on a broad range of dynamic processes, including cell migration, replication and vesicular trafficking. Here we describe in detail how to prepare host and fungal cells, and to conduct the video microscopy experiments. These methods can provide a user-guide for future studies with other phagocytes and microorganisms.  相似文献   

7.
Deletion of DNA polymerase eta (Rad30/Polη) in pathogenic yeast Candida albicans is known to reduce filamentation induced by serum, ultraviolet, and cisplatin. Because nonfilamentous C. albicans is widely accepted as avirulent form, here we explored the virulence and pathogenicity of a rad30Δ strain of C. albicans in cell‐based and animal systems. Flow cytometry of cocultured fungal and differentiated macrophage cells revealed that comparatively higher percentage of macrophages was associated with the wild‐type than rad30Δ cells. In contrast, higher number of Polη‐deficient C. albicans adhered per macrophage membrane. Imaging flow cytometry showed that the wild‐type C. albicans developed hyphae after phagocytosis that caused necrotic death of macrophages to evade their clearance. Conversely, phagosomes kill the fungal cells as estimated by increased metacaspase activity in wild‐type C. albicans. Despite the morphological differences, both wild‐type and rad30? C. albicans were virulent with a varying degree of pathogenicity in mice models. Notably, mice with Th1 immunity were comparatively less susceptible to systemic fungal infection than Th2 type. Thus, our study clearly suggests that the modes of interaction of morphologically different C. albicans strains with the host immune cells are diverged, and host genetic background and several other attributing factors of the fungus could additionally determine their virulence.  相似文献   

8.
Mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinases are pivotal components of eukaryotic signaling cascades. Phosphorylation of tyrosine and threonine residues activates MAP kinases, but either dual-specificity or monospecificity phosphatases can inactivate them. The Candida albicans CPP1 gene, a structural member of the VH1 family of dual- specificity phosphatases, was previously cloned by its ability to block the pheromone response MAP kinase cascade in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Cpp1p inactivated mammalian MAP kinases in vitro and acted as a tyrosine-specific enzyme. In C. albicans a MAP kinase cascade can trigger the transition from the budding yeast form to a more invasive filamentous form. Disruption of the CPP1 gene in C. albicans derepressed the yeast to hyphal transition at ambient temperatures, on solid surfaces. A hyphal growth rate defect under physiological conditions in vitro was also observed and could explain a reduction in virulence associated with reduced fungal burden in the kidneys seen in a systemic mouse model. A hyper-hyphal pathway may thus have some detrimental effects on C. albicans cells. Disruption of the MAP kinase homologue CEK1 suppressed the morphological effects of the CPP1 disruption in C. albicans. The results presented here demonstrate the biological importance of a tyrosine phosphatase in cell-fate decisions and virulence in C. albicans.  相似文献   

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Candida albicans is a major opportunistic pathogen of humans. It can grow as morphologically distinct yeast, pseudohyphae and hyphae, and the ability to switch reversibly among different forms is critical for its virulence. The relationship between morphogenesis and innate immune recognition is not quite clear. Dectin-1 is a major C-type lectin receptor that recognizes β-glucan in the fungal cell wall. C. albicans β-glucan is usually masked by the outer mannan layer of the cell wall. Whether and how β-glucan masking is differentially regulated during hyphal morphogenesis is not fully understood. Here we show that the endo-1,3-glucanase Eng1 is differentially expressed in yeast, and together with Yeast Wall Protein 1 (Ywp1), regulates β-glucan exposure and Dectin-1-dependent immune activation of macrophage by yeast cells. ENG1 deletion results in enhanced Dectin-1 binding at the septa of yeast cells; while eng1 ywp1 yeast cells show strong overall Dectin-1 binding similar to hyphae of wild-type and eng1 mutants. Correlatively, hyphae of wild-type and eng1 induced similar levels of cytokines in macrophage. ENG1 expression and Eng1-mediated β-glucan trimming are also regulated by antifungal drugs, lactate and N-acetylglucosamine. Deletion of ENG1 modulates virulence in the mouse model of hematogenously disseminated candidiasis in a Dectin-1-dependent manner. The eng1 mutant exhibited attenuated lethality in male mice, but enhanced lethality in female mice, which was associated with a stronger renal immune response and lower fungal burden. Thus, Eng1-regulated β-glucan exposure in yeast cells modulates the balance between immune protection and immunopathogenesis during disseminated candidiasis.  相似文献   

11.
Anti-β-glucan antibodies elicited by a laminarin-conjugate vaccine confer cross-protection to mice challenged with major fungal pathogens such as Candida albicans, Aspergillus fumigatus and Cryptococcus neoformans. To gain insights into protective β-glucan epitope(s) and protection mechanisms, we studied two anti-β-glucan monoclonal antibodies (mAb) with identical complementarity-determining regions but different isotypes (mAb 2G8, IgG2b and mAb 1E12, IgM). C. albicans, the most relevant fungal pathogen for humans, was used as a model.Both mAbs bound to fungal cell surface and to the β1,3-β1,6 glucan of the fungal cell wall skeleton, as shown by immunofluorescence, electron-microscopy and ELISA. They were also equally unable to opsonize fungal cells in a J774 macrophage phagocytosis and killing assay. However, only the IgG2b conferred substantial protection against mucosal and systemic candidiasis in passive vaccination experiments in rodents. Competition ELISA and microarray analyses using sequence-defined glucan oligosaccharides showed that the protective IgG2b selectively bound to β1,3-linked (laminarin-like) glucose sequences whereas the non-protective IgM bound to β1,6- and β1,4-linked glucose sequences in addition to β1,3-linked ones. Only the protective IgG2b recognized heterogeneous, polydisperse high molecular weight cell wall and secretory components of the fungus, two of which were identified as the GPI-anchored cell wall proteins Als3 and Hyr1. In addition, only the IgG2b inhibited in vitro two critical virulence attributes of the fungus, hyphal growth and adherence to human epithelial cells.Our study demonstrates that the isotype of anti-β-glucan antibodies may affect details of the β-glucan epitopes recognized, and this may be associated with a differing ability to inhibit virulence attributes of the fungus and confer protection in vivo. Our data also suggest that the anti-virulence properties of the IgG2b mAb may be linked to its capacity to recognize β-glucan epitope(s) on some cell wall components that exert critical functions in fungal cell wall structure and adherence to host cells.  相似文献   

12.
Experiments were conducted defining the possible basis for increased susceptibility of alloxan-treated and genetically diabetic C57Bl/KsJ mice to infections with Candida albicans. Alloxan monohydrate (175 mg/kg) produced a prolonged state of hyperglycemia, which persisted through 31 days. Parameters of immune responses varied depending upon the interval between alloxan administration and testing. In the period immediately following alloxan treatment (1–14 days), the numbers of lymphocytes in the thymus and spleen were reduced, the numbers of recoverable peritoneal macrophages were decreased, and the mice showed an increased susceptibility to intravenous infection with C. albicans. In contrast, splenic lymphocytes responded normally to stimulation with Con A, and in vitro phagocytosis of yeast cells by peritoneal macrophages was normal. Also, in vivo production of such lymphokines as migration inhibitory factor (MIF) and macrophage activating factor (MAF), as well as delayed hypersensitivity footpad responses, was generally within the normal range. In the later phase of alloxan diabetes (21–28 days) after administration of alloxan, lymphoid cellularity recovered progressively and the numbers of recoverable peritoneal macrophages were normal. However, these mice still showed an increased susceptibility to C. albicans infection. Genetically diabetic mice (C57Bl/KsJ, db/db) were abnormal in virtually all the assays involving cell-mediated immunity. The numbers of lymphocytes and peritoneal macrophages were markedly decreased, lymphoid cells responded poorly to Con A, and the phagocytosis of yeast cells by macrophages was depressed. The in vivo production of lymphokines and footpad responses of the delayed-type hypersensitivity were depressed. In addition, these mice were highly susceptible to intravenous infection with C. albicans.  相似文献   

13.
Summary Rabbits were immunized with histoplasmin emulsified in Freund's complete adjuvant. Antibody raised in these rabbits was exposed to Histoplasma capsulatum yeast cells, either in tissue culture medium, or after in vitro or in vivo phagocytosis by mouse macrophages. The sites of antibody binding were identified using an immunoperoxidase technique. At least two sites of antibody binding were identified, one to the fungal cell wall and the other to the outer cell membrane. Within 6 h after phagocytosis by macrophages, fungal cell walls appeared roughened, with what appeared to be cell wall antigen released into the phagolysosome, appearing associated with the phagolysosome membrane, and possibly adjacent macrophage cytoplasm. Similar staining of fungal antigen was noted in alveolar macrophages which had ingested Histoplasma capsulatum after a respiratory challenge. This method may be useful in detailing the host/pathogen interactions which occur in human pulmonary histoplasmosis.  相似文献   

14.
The antifungal plant defensin RsAFP2 isolated from radish interacts with fungal glucosylceramides and induces apoptosis in Candida albicans. To further unravel the mechanism of RsAFP2 antifungal action and tolerance mechanisms, we screened a library of 2868 heterozygous C. albicans deletion mutants and identified 30 RsAFP2‐hypersensitive mutants. The most prominent group of RsAFP2 tolerance genes was involved in cell wall integrity and hyphal growth/septin ring formation. Consistent with these genetic data, we demonstrated that RsAFP2 interacts with the cell wall of C. albicans, which also contains glucosylceramides, and activates the cell wall integrity pathway. Moreover, we found that RsAFP2 induces mislocalization of septins and blocks the yeast‐to‐hypha transition in C. albicans. Increased ceramide levels have previously been shown to result in apoptosis and septin mislocalization. Therefore, ceramide levels in C. albicans membranes were analysed following RsAFP2 treatment and, as expected, increased accumulation of phytoC24‐ceramides in membranes of RsAFP2‐treated C. albicans cells was detected. This is the first report on the interaction of a plant defensin with glucosylceramides in the fungal cell wall, causing cell wall stress, and on the effects of a defensin on septin localization and ceramide accumulation.  相似文献   

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We have previously characterized several fungal‐specific proteins from the human pathogen Candida albicans that either encode subunits of mitochondria Complex I (CI) of the electron transport chain (ETC) or regulate CI activity (Goa1p). Herein, the role of energy production and cell wall gene expression is investigated in the mitochondria mutant goa1Δ. We show that downregulation of cell wall‐encoding genes in the goa1Δ results in sensitivity to cell wall inhibitors such as Congo red and Calcofluor white, reduced phagocytosis by a macrophage cell line, reduced recognition by macrophage receptors, and decreased expression of cytokines such as IL‐6, IL‐10 and IFN‐γ. In spite of the reduced recognition by macrophages, the goa1Δ is still killed to the same extent as control strains. We also demonstrate that expression of the epithelial cell receptors E‐cadherin and EGFR is also reduced in the presence of goa1Δ. Together, our data demonstrate the importance of mitochondria in the expression of cell wall biomolecules and the interaction of C. albicans with innate immune and epithelial cells. Our underlying premise is thatmitochondrial proteins such as Goa1p and other fungal‐specific mitochondrial proteins regulate critical functions in cell growth and in virulence. As such, they remain as valid drug targets for antifungal drug discovery.  相似文献   

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The common fungal pathogen Candida albicans has the ability to grow as a yeast or as a hypha and can alternate between these morphotypes. The overall biomass of both morphotypes increases with growth. However, only yeasts, but not hyphae, exist as discrete cellular entities. Multiplicity of infection (MOI) is a useful parameter to determine the initial inoculum of yeasts for in vitro infection assays. Since the amount of hyphae is difficult to quantify, comparable starting conditions in such assays cannot be determined accurately for yeasts and hyphae using MOI. To circumvent this problem, we have established a set of correlation coefficients to convert fungal metabolic activity and optical density to dry mass. Using these correlations, we were able to accurately compare ROS production and IL-8 release by polymorphonuclear neutrophils upon infection with equal dry mass amounts of yeast and hyphal morphotypes. Neutrophil responses depended on the initial form of infection, irrespective of C. albicans wild-type yeasts transforming to hyphal growth during the assay. Infection with a high mass of live C. albicans yeasts resulted in lower neutrophil ROS and this decrease stems from efficient ROS detoxification by C. albicans without directly affecting the phagocyte ROS machinery. Moreover, we show that dead C. albicans induces significantly less ROS and IL-8 release than live fungi, but thimerosal-killed C. albicans were still able to detoxify neutrophil ROS. Thus, the dry mass approach presented in this study reveals neutrophil responses to different amounts and morphotypes of C. albicans and serves as a template for studies that aim to identify morphotype-specific responses in a variety of immune cells.  相似文献   

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