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都柏林念珠菌与人类颊上皮细胞的细胞表面疏水性相关黏附

Cell surface hydrophobicity-associated adherence of Candida dubliniensis to human buccal epithelial cells.

作者信息

Jabra-Rizk M A, Falkler W A, Merz W G, Baqui A A, Kelley J I, Meiller T F

机构信息

Department of Oral Medicine, Dental School, University of Maryland, 666 W Baltimore Street, Baltimore, MD 21201, USA.

出版信息

Rev Iberoam Micol. 2001 Mar;18(1):17-22.

Abstract

Microbial adherence to mucosal surfaces is an important first step in the initiation of the pathogenic process in the oral cavity. Candida albicans, the most adherent and pathogenic Candida species, utilizes a variety of mechanisms to adhere to human tissues. Although the strongest mechanism of adherence involves mannoprotein adhesins on C. albicans, cell surface hydrophobicity (CSH) plays an important role in the adherence process by providing hydrophobic interactions that turn the initial attachment between the yeast and a surface into a strong bond. Recent cell wall analytical and comparative studies showed that, Candida dubliniensis, unlike C. albicans, possesses cell surface variations that allow it to be constantly hydrophobic, regardless of growth temperature. Based on these observations, the present study was designed to compare the adherence abilities of C. dubliniensis and C. albicans to pooled human buccal epithelial cells (BEC), in regards to their cell surface hydrophobicity. Ten C. albicans and nine C. dubliniensis isolates, as well as the C. albicans hydrophobic variant A9V10 were evaluated for adherence with BEC using visual aggregation in the wells of a microtiter plate and microscopic examination. All 11 C. albicans isolates failed to show adherence to BEC, visually or microscopically, when grown at 37 degrees C. The same isolates, however, showed significant increase in aggregation and microscopic adherence to BEC when grown at 25 degrees C. All C. dubliniensis isolates tested and the A9V10 C. albicans hydrophobic variant resulted in visual aggregation and adhered to BEC when grown at either temperature. The findings from this study show that, based on comparative adherence results and growth temperature changes, C. dubliniensis seems to have greater adherence to BEC than do typical C. albicans strains and that hydrophobic interactions seem to be the mechanism of adherence involved. Although many questions remain to be answered regarding the clinical implications of this observed in vitro enhanced adherence of C. dubliniensis to human BEC, these findings support the establishment of this novel species as a clinically significant yeast.

摘要

微生物黏附于黏膜表面是口腔致病过程起始的重要第一步。白色念珠菌是最具黏附性和致病性的念珠菌属物种,它利用多种机制黏附于人体组织。尽管最强的黏附机制涉及白色念珠菌上的甘露糖蛋白黏附素,但细胞表面疏水性(CSH)通过提供疏水相互作用在黏附过程中发挥重要作用,这种相互作用将酵母与表面之间的初始附着转化为牢固的结合。最近的细胞壁分析和比较研究表明,都柏林念珠菌与白色念珠菌不同,它具有细胞表面变异,使其无论生长温度如何都能始终保持疏水性。基于这些观察结果,本研究旨在比较都柏林念珠菌和白色念珠菌对汇集的人颊上皮细胞(BEC)的黏附能力,以及它们的细胞表面疏水性。使用微量滴定板孔中的视觉聚集和显微镜检查,对10株白色念珠菌、9株都柏林念珠菌分离株以及白色念珠菌疏水变异体A9V10与BEC的黏附情况进行了评估。所有11株白色念珠菌分离株在37℃培养时,在视觉或显微镜下均未显示出对BEC的黏附。然而,相同的分离株在25℃培养时,对BEC的聚集和显微镜下黏附显著增加。所有测试的都柏林念珠菌分离株以及A9V10白色念珠菌疏水变异体在两种温度下培养时均导致视觉聚集并黏附于BEC。本研究的结果表明,基于比较黏附结果和生长温度变化,都柏林念珠菌似乎比典型的白色念珠菌菌株对BEC具有更强的黏附性,并且疏水相互作用似乎是其涉及的黏附机制。尽管关于都柏林念珠菌在体外对人BEC增强黏附的临床意义仍有许多问题有待解答,但这些发现支持将这个新物种确立为具有临床意义的酵母。

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