Bain Judith M, Louw Johanna, Lewis Leanne E, Okai Blessing, Walls Catriona A, Ballou Elizabeth R, Walker Louise A, Reid Delyth, Munro Carol A, Brown Alistair J P, Brown Gordon D, Gow Neil A R, Erwig Lars P
Aberdeen Fungal Group, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen, United Kingdom
Aberdeen Fungal Group, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen, United Kingdom.
mBio. 2014 Dec 2;5(6):e01874. doi: 10.1128/mBio.01874-14.
Candida albicans is a major life-threatening human fungal pathogen in the immunocompromised host. Host defense against systemic Candida infection relies heavily on the capacity of professional phagocytes of the innate immune system to ingest and destroy fungal cells. A number of pathogens, including C. albicans, have evolved mechanisms that attenuate the efficiency of phagosome-mediated inactivation, promoting their survival and replication within the host. Here we visualize host-pathogen interactions using live-cell imaging and show that viable, but not heat- or UV-killed C. albicans cells profoundly delay phagosome maturation in macrophage cell lines and primary macrophages. The ability of C. albicans to delay phagosome maturation is dependent on cell wall composition and fungal morphology. Loss of cell wall O-mannan is associated with enhanced acquisition of phagosome maturation markers, distinct changes in Rab GTPase acquisition by the maturing phagosome, impaired hyphal growth within macrophage phagosomes, profound changes in macrophage actin dynamics, and ultimately a reduced ability of fungal cells to escape from macrophage phagosomes. The loss of cell wall O-mannan leads to exposure of β-glucan in the inner cell wall, facilitating recognition by Dectin-1, which is associated with enhanced phagosome maturation.
Innate cells engulf and destroy invading organisms by phagocytosis, which is essential for the elimination of fungal cells to protect against systemic life-threatening infections. Yet comparatively little is known about what controls the maturation of phagosomes following ingestion of fungal cells. We used live-cell microscopy and fluorescent protein reporter macrophages to understand how C. albicans viability, filamentous growth, and cell wall composition affect phagosome maturation and the survival of the pathogen within host macrophages. We have demonstrated that cell wall glycosylation and yeast-hypha morphogenesis are required for disruption of host processes that function to inactivate pathogens, leading to survival and escape of this fungal pathogen from within host phagocytes. The methods employed here are applicable to study interactions of other pathogens with phagocytic cells to dissect how specific microbial features impact different stages of phagosome maturation and the survival of the pathogen or host.
白色念珠菌是免疫功能低下宿主中一种主要的危及生命的人类真菌病原体。宿主抵御全身性念珠菌感染在很大程度上依赖于先天免疫系统中专业吞噬细胞摄取和破坏真菌细胞的能力。包括白色念珠菌在内的许多病原体已经进化出一些机制,这些机制会削弱吞噬体介导的失活效率,从而促进它们在宿主体内的存活和复制。在这里,我们使用活细胞成像技术观察宿主与病原体的相互作用,并表明活的而非热灭活或紫外线灭活的白色念珠菌细胞会显著延迟巨噬细胞系和原代巨噬细胞中吞噬体的成熟。白色念珠菌延迟吞噬体成熟的能力取决于细胞壁组成和真菌形态。细胞壁O - 甘露聚糖的缺失与吞噬体成熟标志物的获取增加、成熟吞噬体对Rab GTP酶获取的明显变化、巨噬细胞吞噬体内菌丝生长受损、巨噬细胞肌动蛋白动力学的深刻变化以及最终真菌细胞从巨噬细胞吞噬体中逃逸的能力降低有关。细胞壁O - 甘露聚糖的缺失导致β - 葡聚糖暴露于细胞壁内层,便于被Dectin - 1识别,这与增强的吞噬体成熟有关。
先天细胞通过吞噬作用吞噬并破坏入侵的生物体,这对于消除真菌细胞以预防全身性危及生命的感染至关重要。然而,关于吞噬真菌细胞后控制吞噬体成熟的因素,我们所知相对较少。我们使用活细胞显微镜和荧光蛋白报告巨噬细胞来了解白色念珠菌的活力、丝状生长和细胞壁组成如何影响吞噬体成熟以及病原体在宿主巨噬细胞内的存活。我们已经证明,细胞壁糖基化和酵母 - 菌丝形态发生对于破坏宿主使病原体失活的过程是必需的,从而导致这种真菌病原体在宿主吞噬细胞内存活并逃逸。这里采用的方法适用于研究其他病原体与吞噬细胞的相互作用,以剖析特定微生物特征如何影响吞噬体成熟的不同阶段以及病原体或宿主的存活。