Abstract: | We investigated the opsonic activity of the serum factors affecting phagocytosis of Cryptococcus neoformans in vitro to elucidate the role of humoral factors in the host defense mechanisms against cryptococcosis. Two strains of C. neoformans, one heavily and one weakly encapsulated, were used. Guinea pig peripheral blood leukocytes (PBLs) were used for phagocytosis. The viable weakly encapsulated cells were ingested effectively by PBLs, in the presence of guinea pig normal fresh serum, while the heavily encapsulated cells were not ingested. Neither immune serum, its IgG fraction alone, nor heated serum promoted the phagocytosis of either the weakly or heavily encapsulated strain. On the other hand, immune serum promoted adherence of PBLs to viable cells of the heavily encapsulated strain, forming rosettes in the presence of fresh serum. A substantial amount of C3b component was detected on yeast cells when weakly encapsulated cells were incubated with human fresh serum, or heavily encapsulated cells were incubated with rabbit immune serum together with human fresh serum. Serum chelation experiments also indicated that the factors involved in the alternative complement pathway are opsonins for the weakly encapsulated strain. These results suggest that the alternative pathway plays an important normal opsonic role for weakly encapsulated strains and that specific antibody plays an immune opsonic role for heavily encapsulated strains of C. neoformans via the classical pathway of complement activation. |