Ellett Felix, Jorgensen Julianne, Frydman Galit H, Jones Caroline N, Irimia Daniel
BioMEMS Resource Center, Division of Surgery, Innovation and Bioengineering, Department of Surgery, Massachusetts General Hospital, Shriners Burns Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Massachusetts, United States of America.
Division of Comparative Medicine, Department of Biological Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States of America.
PLoS Pathog. 2017 Jan 11;13(1):e1006154. doi: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1006154. eCollection 2017 Jan.
Invasive aspergillosis (IA), primarily caused by Aspergillus fumigatus, is an opportunistic fungal infection predominantly affecting immunocompromised and neutropenic patients that is difficult to treat and results in high mortality. Investigations of neutrophil-hypha interaction in vitro and in animal models of IA are limited by lack of temporal and spatial control over interactions. This study presents a new approach for studying neutrophil-hypha interaction at single cell resolution over time, which revealed an evasive fungal behavior triggered by interaction with neutrophils: Interacting hyphae performed de novo tip formation to generate new hyphal branches, allowing the fungi to avoid the interaction point and continue invasive growth. Induction of this mechanism was independent of neutrophil NADPH oxidase activity and neutrophil extracellular trap (NET) formation, but could be phenocopied by iron chelation and mechanical or physiological stalling of hyphal tip extension. The consequence of branch induction upon interaction outcome depends on the number and activity of neutrophils available: In the presence of sufficient neutrophils branching makes hyphae more vulnerable to destruction, while in the presence of limited neutrophils the interaction increases the number of hyphal tips, potentially making the infection more aggressive. This has direct implications for infections in neutrophil-deficient patients and opens new avenues for treatments targeting fungal branching.
侵袭性曲霉病(IA)主要由烟曲霉引起,是一种机会性真菌感染,主要影响免疫功能低下和中性粒细胞减少的患者,这种感染难以治疗且死亡率很高。对IA体外和动物模型中中性粒细胞与菌丝相互作用的研究受到相互作用缺乏时间和空间控制的限制。本研究提出了一种在单细胞分辨率下随时间研究中性粒细胞与菌丝相互作用的新方法,该方法揭示了一种由与中性粒细胞相互作用触发的真菌逃避行为:相互作用的菌丝进行从头顶端形成以产生新的菌丝分支,使真菌能够避开相互作用点并继续侵袭性生长。这种机制的诱导独立于中性粒细胞NADPH氧化酶活性和中性粒细胞胞外陷阱(NET)形成,但可通过铁螯合以及菌丝顶端延伸的机械或生理停滞进行模拟。相互作用结果时分支诱导的后果取决于可用中性粒细胞的数量和活性:在有足够中性粒细胞的情况下,分支会使菌丝更容易被破坏,而在中性粒细胞数量有限的情况下,相互作用会增加菌丝顶端的数量,可能使感染更具侵袭性。这对中性粒细胞缺乏患者的感染有直接影响,并为针对真菌分支的治疗开辟了新途径。