Tenor Jennifer L, Oehlers Stefan H, Yang Jialu L, Tobin David M, Perfect John R
Division of Infectious Diseases, Department of Medicine, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina, USA.
Department of Molecular Genetics and Microbiology, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina, USA.
mBio. 2015 Sep 29;6(5):e01425-15. doi: 10.1128/mBio.01425-15.
The human fungal pathogen Cryptococcus neoformans is capable of infecting a broad range of hosts, from invertebrates like amoebas and nematodes to standard vertebrate models such as mice and rabbits. Here we have taken advantage of a zebrafish model to investigate host-pathogen interactions of Cryptococcus with the zebrafish innate immune system, which shares a highly conserved framework with that of mammals. Through live-imaging observations and genetic knockdown, we establish that macrophages are the primary immune cells responsible for responding to and containing acute cryptococcal infections. By interrogating survival and cryptococcal burden following infection with a panel of Cryptococcus mutants, we find that virulence factors initially identified as important in causing disease in mice are also necessary for pathogenesis in zebrafish larvae. Live imaging of the cranial blood vessels of infected larvae reveals that C. neoformans is able to penetrate the zebrafish brain following intravenous infection. By studying a C. neoformans FNX1 gene mutant, we find that blood-brain barrier invasion is dependent on a known cryptococcal invasion-promoting pathway previously identified in a murine model of central nervous system invasion. The zebrafish-C. neoformans platform provides a visually and genetically accessible vertebrate model system for cryptococcal pathogenesis with many of the advantages of small invertebrates. This model is well suited for higher-throughput screening of mutants, mechanistic dissection of cryptococcal pathogenesis in live animals, and use in the evaluation of therapeutic agents.
Cryptococcus neoformans is an important opportunistic pathogen that is estimated to be responsible for more than 600,000 deaths worldwide annually. Existing mammalian models of cryptococcal pathogenesis are costly, and the analysis of important pathogenic processes such as meningitis is laborious and remains a challenge to visualize. Conversely, although invertebrate models of cryptococcal infection allow high-throughput assays, they fail to replicate the anatomical complexity found in vertebrates and, specifically, cryptococcal stages of disease. Here we have utilized larval zebrafish as a platform that overcomes many of these limitations. We demonstrate that the pathogenesis of C. neoformans infection in zebrafish involves factors identical to those in mammalian and invertebrate infections. We then utilize the live-imaging capacity of zebrafish larvae to follow the progression of cryptococcal infection in real time and establish a relevant model of the critical central nervous system infection phase of disease in a nonmammalian model.
人类真菌病原体新型隐球菌能够感染广泛的宿主,从变形虫和线虫等无脊椎动物到小鼠和兔子等标准脊椎动物模型。在这里,我们利用斑马鱼模型来研究新型隐球菌与斑马鱼先天免疫系统的宿主 - 病原体相互作用,斑马鱼先天免疫系统与哺乳动物的先天免疫系统有着高度保守的框架。通过实时成像观察和基因敲低,我们确定巨噬细胞是负责应对和控制急性新型隐球菌感染的主要免疫细胞。通过用一组新型隐球菌突变体感染后询问存活率和新型隐球菌负荷,我们发现最初被确定为在小鼠致病中重要的毒力因子在斑马鱼幼虫发病机制中也是必需的。对感染幼虫的颅血管进行实时成像显示,新型隐球菌在静脉感染后能够穿透斑马鱼大脑。通过研究新型隐球菌FNX1基因突变体,我们发现血脑屏障的入侵依赖于先前在中枢神经系统入侵的小鼠模型中确定的一种已知的新型隐球菌促进入侵途径。斑马鱼 - 新型隐球菌平台为新型隐球菌发病机制提供了一个在视觉和遗传上易于操作的脊椎动物模型系统,具有许多小型无脊椎动物的优点。该模型非常适合对突变体进行高通量筛选、在活体动物中对新型隐球菌发病机制进行机制剖析以及用于评估治疗药物。
新型隐球菌是一种重要的机会性病原体,据估计每年在全球导致超过60万人死亡。现有的新型隐球菌发病机制的哺乳动物模型成本高昂,对诸如脑膜炎等重要致病过程的分析费力且在可视化方面仍然是一项挑战。相反,尽管新型隐球菌感染的无脊椎动物模型允许进行高通量检测,但它们无法复制脊椎动物中发现的解剖复杂性,特别是疾病的新型隐球菌阶段。在这里,我们利用斑马鱼幼虫作为一个克服了许多这些局限性的平台。我们证明新型隐球菌在斑马鱼中的感染发病机制涉及与哺乳动物和无脊椎动物感染中相同的因素。然后,我们利用斑马鱼幼虫的实时成像能力实时跟踪新型隐球菌感染的进展,并在非哺乳动物模型中建立了疾病关键中枢神经系统感染阶段的相关模型。