Medical Mycology Unit, Department of Biology, National Institute for Cellular Biotechnology, National University of Ireland Maynooth, Co. Kildare, Ireland.
Respiratory Research Division, Department of Medicine, Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland, Beaumont Hospital, Dublin 9, Ireland.
J Med Microbiol. 2010 Jun;59(Pt 6):625-633. doi: 10.1099/jmm.0.018192-0. Epub 2010 Mar 4.
The filamentous fungus Aspergillus fumigatus produces a variety of enzymes and toxins that may facilitate fungal colonization of tissue and evasion of the host immune response. One such toxin, fumagillin, was investigated for its ability to inhibit the action of neutrophils, which are a central component of the innate immune response to microbial infection. Neutrophils exposed to 2 microg fumagillin ml(-1) for 25 min showed a significantly reduced ability to kill yeast cells (P<0.02), to phagocytose conidia of A. fumigatus (P<0.023) and to consume oxygen (P<0.032). The ability of neutrophils to generate superoxide is dependent upon the action of a functional NADPH oxidase complex which is composed of cytosolic (p40phox, p47phox, p67phox, Rac2) and membrane (gp91phox) proteins. Exposure of neutrophils to fumagillin inhibited the formation of the NADPH oxidase complex by blocking the translocation of p47phox from the cytosolic to the membrane fraction (P=0.02). In addition to the production of superoxide, neutrophils also undergo degranulation, which leads to the release of proteolytic enzymes that contribute to the microbicidal activity of the cell. Fumagillin-treated neutrophils showed reduced degranulation as evidenced by lower myeloperoxidase activity (P<0.019). Fumagillin-treated cells demonstrated reduced levels of F-actin, thus indicating that retarding the formation of F-actin may contribute to the inhibition of the structural rearrangements required in the activated neutrophil. This work indicates that fumagillin may contribute to reducing the local immune response by altering the activity of neutrophils and thus facilitate the continued persistence and growth of A. fumigatus in the host.
烟曲霉是一种丝状真菌,它会产生多种酶和毒素,这可能有助于真菌定植组织并逃避宿主的免疫反应。其中一种毒素,即 fumagillin,因其能够抑制中性粒细胞的作用而受到研究,中性粒细胞是微生物感染时固有免疫反应的核心组成部分。暴露于 2μg/ml fumagillin 中 25 分钟的中性粒细胞,其杀死酵母菌的能力明显降低(P<0.02),吞噬烟曲霉分生孢子的能力(P<0.023)和消耗氧气的能力(P<0.032)也明显降低。中性粒细胞产生超氧化物的能力取决于一个功能齐全的 NADPH 氧化酶复合物的作用,该复合物由胞质(p40phox、p47phox、p67phox、Rac2)和膜(gp91phox)蛋白组成。Fumagillin 暴露会抑制 NADPH 氧化酶复合物的形成,从而阻止 p47phox 从胞质向膜部分的易位(P=0.02)。除了产生超氧化物外,中性粒细胞还会脱粒,这会导致释放蛋白水解酶,从而有助于细胞的杀菌活性。Fumagillin 处理的中性粒细胞脱粒减少,这表现为髓过氧化物酶活性降低(P<0.019)。Fumagillin 处理的细胞显示 F-肌动蛋白水平降低,这表明延缓 F-肌动蛋白的形成可能有助于抑制激活的中性粒细胞所需的结构重排。这项工作表明,fumagillin 可能通过改变中性粒细胞的活性来减少局部免疫反应,从而促进烟曲霉在宿主中的持续存在和生长。