Mercado Soto Nayanna M, Horn Adam, Keller Nancy P, Huttenlocher Anna, Wagner Andrew S
bioRxiv. 2024 Nov 12:2024.11.12.623264. doi: 10.1101/2024.11.12.623264.
Secondary fungal infections represent a major complication following thermal injuries. However, the mechanisms of fungal colonization of burn tissue and how the host subsequently responds to fungi within this niche remain unclear. We have previously reported a zebrafish model of thermal injury that recapitulates many of the features of human burn wounds. Here, we characterize host-fungal interaction dynamics within the burn wound niche using two of the most common fungal pathogens isolated from burn injuries, and . Both and colonize burned tissue in zebrafish larvae and induce a largely conserved innate immune response following colonization. Using drug-induced cell depletion strategies and transgenic zebrafish lines with impaired innate immune function, we found that macrophages control fungal burden while neutrophils primarily control invasive hyphal growth at the early stages of infection. However, we also found that loss of either immune cell can be compensated by the other at the later stages of infection, and that fish with both macrophage and neutrophil deficiencies show more invasive hyphal growth that is sustained throughout the infection process, suggesting redundancy in their antifungal activities. Finally, we demonstrate that strains with increased β(1,3)-glucan exposure are cleared faster from the burn wound, demonstrating a need for shielding this immunogenic cell wall epitope for successful fungal colonization of burn tissue. Together, our findings support the use of zebrafish larvae as a model to study host-fungal interaction dynamics within burn wounds.
Secondary fungal infections within burn wound injuries are a significant problem that delay wound healing and increase the risk of patient mortality. Currently, little is known about how fungi colonize and infect burn tissue or how the host responds to pathogen presence. In this report, we expand upon an existing thermal injury model using zebrafish larvae to begin to elucidate both the host immune response to fungal burn colonization and fungal mechanisms for persistence within burn tissue. We found that both and , common fungal burn wound isolates, successfully colonize burn tissue and are effectively cleared in immunocompetent zebrafish by both macrophages and neutrophils. We also find that mutants harboring mutations that impact their ability to evade host immune system recognition are cleared more readily from burn tissue. Collectively, our work highlights the efficacy of using zebrafish to study host-fungal interaction dynamics within burn wounds.
继发性真菌感染是热损伤后的主要并发症。然而,烧伤组织中真菌定植的机制以及宿主随后如何对该生态位内的真菌作出反应仍不清楚。我们之前报道了一种热损伤斑马鱼模型,该模型概括了人类烧伤创面的许多特征。在此,我们使用从烧伤创面分离出的两种最常见真菌病原体,来表征烧伤创面生态位内的宿主-真菌相互作用动态。两种病原体都在斑马鱼幼体的烧伤组织中定植,并在定植后诱导出基本保守的先天免疫反应。使用药物诱导的细胞耗竭策略以及先天免疫功能受损的转基因斑马鱼品系,我们发现巨噬细胞控制真菌负荷,而中性粒细胞在感染早期主要控制侵袭性菌丝生长。然而,我们还发现,在感染后期,任一免疫细胞的缺失都可由另一种细胞代偿,并且巨噬细胞和中性粒细胞均缺乏的斑马鱼在整个感染过程中显示出更具侵袭性的菌丝生长,这表明它们的抗真菌活性存在冗余。最后,我们证明,β(1,3)-葡聚糖暴露增加的菌株从烧伤创面清除得更快,这表明为使真菌成功定植于烧伤组织,需要屏蔽这种免疫原性细胞壁表位。总之,我们的研究结果支持使用斑马鱼幼体作为模型来研究烧伤创面内的宿主-真菌相互作用动态。
烧伤创面的继发性真菌感染是一个严重问题,会延迟伤口愈合并增加患者死亡风险。目前,对于真菌如何定植和感染烧伤组织,或者宿主如何对病原体的存在作出反应,人们了解甚少。在本报告中,我们扩展了现有的使用斑马鱼幼体的热损伤模型,以开始阐明宿主对真菌烧伤定植的免疫反应以及真菌在烧伤组织中持续存在的机制。我们发现,两种常见的烧伤创面真菌分离株,都能成功定植于烧伤组织,并在具有免疫能力的斑马鱼中被巨噬细胞和中性粒细胞有效清除。我们还发现,携带影响其逃避宿主免疫系统识别能力突变的突变体更容易从烧伤组织中清除。总体而言,我们的工作突出了使用斑马鱼研究烧伤创面内宿主-真菌相互作用动态的有效性。